Product Details
Factory Reconditioned Ryobi ZR30002 18-Inch 30cc 1 HP Gas-Powered Straight-Shaft String Trimmer (Non-CARB Compliant)

Factory Reconditioned Ryobi ZR30002 18-Inch 30cc 1 HP Gas-Powered Straight-Shaft String Trimmer (Non-CARB Compliant)
From Ryobi

Price:

Currently unavailable.


Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #23993 in Home Improvement
  • Brand: Ryobi
  • Model: ZR30002

Features

  • Factory Serviced to perform like new. Minor cosmetic blemishes may be present.
  • 18-inch cutting swath
  • .095-inch bump feed dual line for quick and easy line advancement
  • Zip Start Plus 45% less effort needed to start
  • This item is not for sale in California/Non CARB compliant

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
Ryobi 18" Straight Shaft String Trimmer with 30cc 1.0HP Engine. Dual piston rings combined with hard chrome-plated cylinder provide greater compression for increased power and efficiency. Accepts Expand-it attachments converting to a pruner, edger, blower, tiller, brush cutter, and hedge trimmer (attachments sold separately). Anti-vibration handle for operator comfort.


Customer Reviews

GOOD BUY!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I OWN 7 JUST LIKE THIS ONE5
I OWN A SMALL LANDSCAPING SERVICE AND I ALWAYS KEEP 2 OR 3 EXTRA TRIMMERS FOR REPLACEMENT ON THE SITE. I HAVE USED MOST ALL BRAND NAME COMMERCIAL TRIMMERS AND HAVE FOUND THAT THE STRAIGHT SHAFT RYOBI WORKS BETTER FOR ME BECAUSE OF THE COST.... I CAN BUY 5 OF THESE FOR THE PRICE OF 1 COMMERCIAL TRIMMER. THE RYOBI'S ARE TOUGH AND WE USE THEM HARD. WE USE A LARGER STRING THAN WHAT IS SUGGESTED, BUT THE LARGE 30CC ENGINE CAN HANDLE IT W/ EASE....GREAT BUY FOR THIS TRIMMER... BY THE WAY THE FACTORY RECONDITIONED TRIMMER LOOKS AND WORK LIKE A BRAND NEW ONE...SO DON'T WORRY ABOUT THAT!
***PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT THIS TRIMMER IS BUILT FOR HOME USE AND IS NOT A $300-$500 COMMERCIAL TRIMMER...I AM RATING A $75 TRIMMER!

Good Power Plant for Attachments4
I am going to write this review to cover several items, and just duplicate it to all the items involved. The items are the reconditioned Ryobi 30 cc straight shaft tiller, the Expand-It Tiller attachment, the Expand-It Edger attachment. The stars and titles, though are for the item it is attached to.

The Expand-It attachments are made by Homelite. I'm not a Homelite fan, but why this was apparently avoided in the descriptions is beyond me. This having been said, they appear to be at least as capable as their more-famous competitor brands.

Factory Reconditioned Ryobi 18-Inch 30cc 1 HP Gas Powered Striaght Shaft String Trimmer (Non-CARB Compliant) #ZR30002

Factory-Reconditioned Expand-It Tiller Attachment for String Trimmers #ZR15521

Factory Reconditioned Expand-It Edger Attachment For String Trimmers #ZR15518

The Ryobi reconditioned power unit for these units is more than adequate for all the tasks involved. Using the straight shaft Ryobi power unit, though can be a little tough. "Reconditioned" means some surface imperfections. I could see no sign of the power plant itself ever having been used. I opened the gas tank and sniffed inside, and could detect no smell of gas, so I believe this was purchased and returned unused or possibly was a display model. Regardless, I believe I got a new unit for a less than new price. You may or may not be as lucky.

The handle that comes with the Ryobi mounts with zero friction surfaces. The wingnuts used to tighten the handle go on a smooth metal bracket that attaches to a smooth plastic backer, around a smooth, painted metal shaft. I added some shelf-liner (the rubber, non-stick type) inside the bracket, then really cranked down on the wingnuts, which helped the situation with the edger and trimmer. More on the cultivator, later.

The power plant started easily by following the instructions. It uses a 50:7 gas:oil mixture, so make sure you have the proper fuel on hand. I primed it seven times by pushing the rubber bulb, pulled the handle two or three times in the full choke position, put the choke to the half-choke position, pulled two more times, and it started. All that I've mentioned to this point is in the instructions. What follows is my own advice: You need to hold the "run trigger" to make it start easily, but this causes the attachment to start rotating immediately, so you then must quickly release the trigger. It takes a slight bit of coordination, but it is easier than starting it without holding the trigger.

The edger works very well. Our yard has apparently never been truly edged. The previous owners were of the "good enough" variety, and probably rarely cut the lawn, much less edged it. The current lawn crew only uses a string trimmer to give an edged appearance. The Expand-It edger tore into the soil easily and left a neat line. I've not finished all of the edging yet, but it appears to work well, and I anticipate no problems.

The String trimmer worked well-enough for the first few feet. I was sent the wrong cut-off attachment, but Amazon was phenomenal in their response. I sent an email around 10:00 pm the night I received the unit with the curved-shaft cut-off/guard unit instead of the straight-shaft line cutter-guard. When I woke up, the reply from Amazon was in my email, and a replacement for the incorrect unit had been shipped by that evening, which was a Saturday. I expect to receive it within two days, which is three days after the original unit arrived. All in all, I didn't buy the unit for the trimmer, anyway, but for the few feet I could do without new line, it worked quite well. I don't expect any problems with the new cut off unit or the trimmer.

The cultivator is NOT for the weak of arm or back. I am over 6 feet tall, fairly athletic, and weigh over 200 pounds. I worked some virgin soil, hard-packed, with roots and rocks. I did about 8 feet by 25 or 30 feet in two to three hours. The cultivator requires a LOT of muscle. If you hit a small rock, it will just toss it forward. Large rocks require stopping and removal, which is to be expected. Smaller tree roots are cut right through, but larger roots cause the unit to buck upward with a lot of force. It is easiest to work the unit down into the soil by pulling it toward you as you push down. There is not enough weight in the cultivator to be of much help. All in all, I'd prefer more weight to help me push down on the working end, even if it means the unit is harder to get into position to use it.

There is no good place to put the handle to use the cultivator. Even with my added friction pad (rubber shelf liner), the handle continued to twist around, only to be re-adjusted several times. It works better with the shelf liner, but still doesn't stand up to the work required. I was using this unit probably to the extent it can be expected to work, so this was really more of a minor inconvenience. I was typically stopping to catch my breath anyway, and re-adjusting the handle was just one of the things I could do while catching a quick rest. You'll need to stop fairly often unless you're some kind of tri-athlete.

I hit a rock that got wedged between the tines and the guard. This caused the unit to lock up. Once I freed up the rock by literally breaking it out with a hammer, the unit went right back into operation none the worse for the wear. I find this torque-overload-shutdown to be very worthwhile. The power plant continued to operate. I do not know if the power plant or the cultivator is responsible for the shutdown, but since no damage was done to either unit, I was quite happy with both of them.

Changing attachments is done by hand, and takes literally less than a minute. About the only thing you could possibly do wrong is force the unit into place without the small square drive-shaft lining up. As this free-wheels easily, just slipping the unit back an inch or two and re-inserting it is all you need to do to re-align the new attachment. Then you hand-tighten and you're on your way.

Pros: Power plant, edger, tiller, and trimmer do the job well. Holds up well, and has plenty of power. Multiple tools for the price of a single unit is a real plus.

Cons: Handle needs some kind of friction increasing device (splines, pads, etc.). Cultivator/tiller is too light, requiring you to use arm strength to get it to bite better into hard soil. There is no good place to put the handle for balance for all types of units.

Eventually worked well3
This trimmer seems to work well for the one day of hard time I subjected it to so far (heavy grass and weeds which probably call for a brush-cutter instead), but it took some struggles to get it going.

First, it is not strictly "gas powered" - which implies straight gas power. It uses gas/oil mix, so you will need to buy a little 3.2 ounce jar of 2-cycle motor oil and a one gallon gas tank to mix it in.

Next, the unit came with a broken 5-cent plastic bracket that holds the throttle cable tight. Fixed that with super glue. Finally, the string was stuck together in the spool so had to disassemble the head to get it loose - not a problem but be sure to read your instructions on how to do this at it's not necessarily intuitive.

This replaced a 1.5 horsepower heavier duty trimmer ($300 range?) and seems to do just as well.