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Trimmer Line Size

  • Smaller

    Votes: 1 0%
  • 0.080

    Votes: 8 2.7%
  • 0.095

    Votes: 216 72%
  • 0.105

    Votes: 61 20%
  • 0.130

    Votes: 7 2.3%
  • 0.155

    Votes: 3 1%
  • Bigger

    Votes: 2 1%

Trimmer Line Size

89K views 43 replies 32 participants last post by  Willienotnelson  
#1 ·
I use .130 and I got looked at like an idiot today by a guy who uses .095. Just wondered what everyone else uses.
 
#3 ·
Im really shocked that people dont run a bigger line. To each his own I guess
 
#4 ·
.95 is best for residential lawns, weekly/bi weekly cuts.
we use .105 line in one of the bigger trimmers for anything thats in between manicured and way overgrown... .130 line in a 36cc Stihl FS130R for real heavy stuff... still not brush though.

Just realized they made .155 last week, saw it somewhere and was like damn!

anything less than good .95 is wasting time, .80 or whatever is too small and gets eaten through easy.
 
#5 ·
For regular lawn trimming I like to use .095. They sell line by the pound so you get more feet of line per spool and you can fit more on the trimmer spool so if it wears slightly faster you still have more line anyways to make up for it. Plus the thinner line causes less damage to whatever your trimming ie. fences, cable wire, siding etc. and while I may be a good enough trimmer not to damage these things the more guys I have the better it is to give them line that they cant do as much damage with. Just my 2 cents.
 
#6 ·
I see the point about it being sold by tin pound, but I use a aluminum fixed line head (not a bump feed) and I pull off 2 1 foot lengths and I only replace line about every 4-5 yards. So I don't use line fast. I have had the same big spool from the end of the season last year and till have over half left. I just like the bigger line...
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#9 ·
I used my buddy's trimmer when I was helping him for a day when he was short handed and he uses 0.95 and it was just so awkard to use. Found myself feeding a lot of line out because I was use to much bigger. Don't think I could ever go back.
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#10 ·
.095 for me, I may need to try some .080 sometime.
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There's even a .065 size line, but why would you want to go that small?
.080 and .065 were made for electric and battery trimmers with limited power. Less power means that they can't eat up line as fast, and cannot swing around a thick line. Also, thinner line, because it is thinner, can cut things a little easier, so these super thin lines make up for under powered machines.
 
#12 ·
#15 ·
Our Stihl's like the round .095 line, and we have a small echo, with crossfire .080 which works awe-sum for us. Use Heavy Gator Line for fields.
 
#19 ·
Agreed with the majority. .095 Stihl line is all I run, I've ran the heavier stuff but didn't really like it. Switched back to .095, anything under that is homeowner territory lol
 
#23 ·
I see the point about it being sold by tin pound, but I use a aluminum fixed line head (not a bump feed) and I pull off 2 1 foot lengths and I only replace line about every 4-5 yards. So I don't use line fast. I have had the same big spool from the end of the season last year and till have over half left. I just like the bigger line...
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How big are the yards your cutting...thats a lot of trim cord.
 
#26 ·
In my old Redmax I found .095 to perform detailed trimming better than .105. I even prefer the way thinner line edges...though, some real fibrous overgrowth would best be served by thicker line. My current Stihl FS-80 doesn't accept .105 w/o some modifying...and with more power than my old RM I'd expect it to be a beast.