Back to Amazon.com
customer reviews
438
3.6 out of 5 stars

Top positive review
20 people found this helpful
This will shred ornamental grasses into mulch
By Gwendolyn on Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2022
I use this to shred all the ornamental grasses I have in my landscape and I have lots of it. It does the job really well. It's best when the material is nice and dry. Wet material, even a little amount, bogs it down and clogs the wide mouth screen at the discharge port. Over 2 days, this machine never stalled on me once. Not once. And I got 4 bags of awesome mulch for free, using the bag that came with it which is probably the size of 2 bags store-bought mulch. I grab a sheaf of 6 foot tall switchgrass in one hand, so maybe 3-4 inches in diameter, and feed it slowly into the blades, holding it until there's only about a foot and a half of the length left, then let the rest get sucked into the blades. This avoids the possibility of the grass wrapping around the blades. Shorter grasses, like prairie dropseed and autumn moor grass, I sprinkle in and it gets shredded without any trouble. I had about 15 stands of switchgrass piled up. Some of it was wet in the middle after being rained on. I spread it out and let the sun dry it out quick. There were some wet leaves mixed in which bogged the motor down a bit but I don't think that's a dealbreaker by any means. Feed it slowly and steadily and reap free mulch. I stopped at one point to clear the discharge screen after it got clogged with the little bit of wet material I did attempt to send through. I also used it for a plant called amsonia hubricthii that shreds into a fibrous cottony material, but it gets stuck in the blade bin corners. I opted to burn the rest of that plant material. Also shredded dead annual and perennial flowers. It didn't come with a push tool like it says it does. It's sturdy and lightweight enough to move around easily and fits in a corner of my garage. Assembly wasn't too bad but I had to figure out which size wrench I needed to tighten the bolts (5/16th) and those nuts that have plastic in the center (10mm). The picture for attaching the wheels is misleading, the sequence of pin, washer, wheel, washer and cap is wrong. Took me 10 minutes to sort that out but I think I got it right. It should be washer, wheel, washer, pin, cap. I have 3 tools now that I use to make my wildlife friendly gardening chores a breeze: a B&D leaf vac/mulcher with backpack collection bag for oak leaves (you gotta get the backpack style), and it does shred wet material fairly easily. A Ryobi cordless battery grass shear that works on everything but woody plants (I love this one, cuts through plants like butter and the battery lasts forever), and now this shredder mulcher. Right tool for the job is key. Everything gets recycled and stays on the property. I feel efficient, capable and proud of a job well-done. I don't have to move huge piles of plant debris into heaps on the curb and wait for it to be collected. I don't have to buy heavy, expensive, unsustainable plastic bags of mulch or have mountains of it dropped in my driveway for shoveling. Ugh (been there, done that). For reference, I'm a 65 year-old female and capable of some relatively heavy chores (5'6', 145 pounds) but prefer to make these chores something I don't dread.
Top critical review
11 people found this helpful
Motor burned, and it does not work after total of 5 days of operation
By Sibel on Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2024
Below review is no longer makes sense, as the motor died after total of five days - within two weeks using it. While this shredder effectively reduces leaves to an 18:1 ratio, it unfortunately has significant drawbacks. One major issue is its tendency to frequently overheat and stop functioning. Despite the label's indication of a 'time-out' mode every 20 minutes, even with a substantial hour-long break, the machine struggles to resume operation, and when it does, it can only function for another 5 or max. 10-minute interval. It seems as though the machine can only effectively shred for a limited duration each day. Moreover, the shredder struggles to handle slightly moist leaves. No matter how dry the leaves are, it frequently jams when more than a handful of leaves are fed into it at once. Dealing with jams is incredibly difficult and time-consuming. I have no choice to compare the two devices I purchased SuperHandy and Worx vaccum/shredder: I thought they would do an amazing job together, but SuperHandy failed its part. Worx vacuum/shredder is the clear winner. The Worx device operates continuously, handles larger volumes of leaves, boasts a 16:1 shredding ratio, and is capable of shredding wet leaves. Additionally, it is significantly more affordable than the SuperHandy shredder. I had high hopes that this machine would efficiently handle all my leaf shredding needs, but unfortunately, it falls short in several critical areas. Perhaps something is wrong with the one I received, and reps can help me troubleshoot and/or replace. Cannot wait to see the outcome, because I haven't completed shredding all leaves.

Sort by:
Filter by:
By -
Verified Amazon Purchase
Vine Customer Review of Free Product
Sorry, no reviews match your current selections.
Try clearing or changing some filters.Show all reviews
Show more reviews


people found this helpful
By -
Verified Amazon Purchase
Vine Customer Review of Free Product