Best Stihl Blower Vacuums & Leaf Blowers
Stihl BG 56
Really strong blower blew wooden chopping board off bench into my ankle and it hurts
Stihl BG 86 C-E
Ridiculously loud, heavy & pretty disappointing – I wouldn’t recommend this blower & especially the vacuum option at all. I did a lot of research before I bought so I so disappointed. I wish I bought the Honda one I was going too Show details
Stihl SH 56 / SH 56 C-E
formal gardeners friend – This is a champion of a tool, very happy with it indeed. But intended more for formal gardeners. It's essentially the standard (and very good)… Read more
stihl leaf blower with an inbuilt leaf mulcher.
Now there are two major drawbacks, 1. That it's strictly for mulching leaves. Not acorns, not bits of bark, not sticks. It will just jam, possibly break. Think of the leaf mulcher as a technical feature.
2. You could stick your hand into the mulcher while the tool was running. This would be a lot like sticking your hand in a blender. Maybe the hatch broke, came open, the mulcher nossel fell off. Maybe your tried to jury rig this with HVAC tube to create a cheaper, lighter version of the industrial model..... then the makeshift tube fell off... and you stuck your hand into it.
Home users would be far better with the electric models that use drill batteries, these being lighter, cheaper, quieter.
Stihl SHE 81
Good product – This blower is good and useful high power and makes my work fast.
Stihl BGA 57
Okay Blower but could be a little more powerful – I purchased the entire STIHL AK 36V battery system with 3 x AK30 batteries and fast charger which includes this BGA 57 leaf blower. This replaced my… Read more
7 year old Victa Vforce mower, trimmer, hedger, leaf blower/vac, pole hedger and pole pruner.
The first thing to say about the STHIL AK garden tools range and this leaf blower is the build and manufacturing quality is excellent, the best of all the battery gardening equipment I looked at and researched. Ryobi, Victa, etc are poorly made, plastic crap compared to the quality of STHIL.
I also have the STHIL BG 86 CE petrol blower.
This BGA 57 blower is light, very well balanced and easy to use. It is also very quiet compared to other blowers I have owned and especially compared to my petrol blower.
However, I do find this blower underpowered and doesn't quite have the blowing capacity as other battery blowers I have used including my old Victa blower. I live in a bush environment and get a lot of leaves and debris on my lawn and pathways.
I can live with this as I have a petrol blower and mainly use the BGA 57 for a quick clean up and on my upstairs balcony, it is also convenient for my family to use for a quick clean up.
I think in an effort to get extended battery life and quietness this has been at the compromise of the one purpose of a blower, that is to move large amounts of air to do the job of cleaning up lawns and pathways.
Battery life is good.
Despite the above, I would still highly recommend this blower as I think would be okay in most domestic situations.
Stihl BGA 60
- Price (RRP) $549
- See all
Bought this blower just over 2.5 years ago. It is very powerful and light and compares favourably to a petrol blower in performance and is much… Read more
quieter. Unfortunately the durability is not there. It has stopped working after just over 2.5 years after been used once every week or two in a small garden. The battery was tested and is still at 95% so a problem with the unit itself (it flashes 3 red lights). Stihl dealer says it has to be repaired at an unknown cost as it’s out of warranty. I would expect more durability from such a premium priced brand.
Stihl BGA 250
Extremely powerful, it snaps my wrist back in the boost setting. I used the AP300 battery and it ran out very quickly, but the AP300S battery is just… Read more
perfect for me. A tip is to only use the normal settings ie before you press past the heavier trigger pressure into boost as this really sucks the battery and is not super more powerful.
Stihl BGA 45
Very powerful. Well balanced and light. The inbuilt battery makes it easy to charge and it has low db to protect your ears. Sale price of $150 makes it very competitive. Also consider BGE 61 plug in at $149.
Stihl BR700
10/10 – After a rather disappointing experience with my old DMC EB430 backpack blower (basically a Husqvarna 130BT copy) where the flywheel nut came off and… Read more
caused chaos in the engine after less than 5 hours use, I decided to finally make the leap and purchase the BR700 from my local mower shop and Stihl dealer, Ashburton Mowers. Although the price tag is quite high for a blower, the increase in efficiency, power and comfort that I got was phenomenal and well worth the expense. I have been very happy with all my Stihl equipment, most of which I have purchased as I have built up my mowing and landscaping business over the past couple of years. None of my Stihl tools have ever had to go back into the dealer for anything at all in that time and more, proving their reliability and quality. I have already put quite a few hours on my 700 (I install hour meters on all my main tools) and am really loving it and so do my helpers. It has mountains of power and the weight isn't really noticeable, even for a 16 year old like myself. This blower will happily go through 11 yards a day and I might fill it up once before we start working in the morning. It sips fuel compared to a lot of other blowers given the 4-mix design (essentially a hybrid 4-stroke), is pretty quiet for its power and has a lot of force in it, especially for thick, wet grass or leaves. The easily adjustable tube and throttle handle is really nice and the throttle lock is great. I have noticed that every now and then if I touch the top of the handle in a certain spot it can sometimes give me a bit of a zap but its hardly noticeable and isn't really something I'm worried about. You do have to be on top of valve adjustments for these machines I hear otherwise you're in for quite a ride but I am good on maintenance so that isn't going to be an issue for me. This blower does have massive amounts of torque given the 4-mix engine so it does give you quite a push back in the arm when you pull the trigger but its great for heavy work.
Overall this blower has done me great so far and I look forward to using it for a long time into the future.
Stihl BR 800 C-E Magnum
Arguably Australia's Best Backpack Blower – Without a doubt a blower is an essential piece of hardware to running a mowing business, maintaining a school, church, or cemetery, or cleaning up… Read more
around a retirement village or even just around your own home. I remember buying my first ever hand-held blower and thinking for a couple of years that it was wonderful. That was until I needed to blow up hill, into a slight breeze, anything wet, under parked cars, or across a swimming pool – in those instances it was akin to using a hair dryer (nearly useless). That was until I saw Stihl brought their first backpack blowers into Australia, the BR400. Echo followed suit, as did Husqvarna, Kawasaki and Shindaiwa. In the last 30 years of starting and operating close to 80 mowing businesses what I have never understood is the incremental improvements to backpack blowers. If it has been demonstrated that air volume and blowing distance (the distance you can stand away from the objects you are blowing) are key factors in how quickly an operator can clean up, why has it taken so long to get to where we are now with the biggest blowers still only at around 75% of weight and width capacity? I’ll review the Stihl BR800 and make references to what I mean so we are clear. If you have never used a backpack blower or even a petrol powered blower, the difference in power between a backpack and a hand held blower is vast. In essence a backpack blower has around 3 times the power of a hand-held. It means you can clean up 3 times faster, blow leaves from under parked cars, up a flight of stairs, up a carpark ramp, blow the rubbish out of a grand stand after the game, or blow the leaves away from an in-ground pool from the other side of the pool. If you are running a large site like a school, university, large car parks, business park or apartment complex where there is a lot of ground to cover a backpack blower would only suit the areas where there are stairs. You would be better suited to a stand-on blower or a towable blower. These put out the equivalent air flow of 11-15 backpack blowers. I bought my BR800 as soon as they were available at my local supplier in Australia. We have only one choice which is the hip-starting model rather than the rope pull being on the engine as in the past. I found this entertaining as we used to reach behind with our left arms and start the BR400 while it was still on our backs, but this became more difficult on the BR500 and 600. So what I found puzzling was why the BR800 didn’t have a dual pulley starting system so it could be started with a rope on the engine or a rope at your hip. At the same time there should be a choke on the hand control assembly. Sometimes there can be an extended delay between shut down and restarting and you put the BR800 on your back but it won’t restart so you have to take it off and repeat the ground cold start procedure. This can be a headache. The strap system is also bewildering. It has 2 straps like a backpack but a torso strap that goes across your ribs in the same fashion a heavy backpack would. Additionally, there is a waist strap that can be employed to reduce the weight of the shoulder straps but the whole unit full of fuel only weighs 13.7kg while many gardeners will wear a Solo (also German) backpack sprayer that weighs 20kg full and only has shoulder straps. Ditto for the Shindaiwa ES726 at 37.6kg fully laden. So is Stihl signalling that they think their machine is heavy or is it designed for mums? All other Stihl lines have a “scary version”. There is a chainsaw I have that my friends won’t ask to borrow. It is big, loud, heavy and around $2400. Same goes for my 1m bar hedge trimmer, my pole saw, my articulated hedge trimmer, my brush cutters and clearing saws and my demolition saws, but when I come home and my wife wants to borrow my BR800 to do some cleaning up I feel the testosterone drain from my body! Why do manufacturers shy away from making a scary version of backpack blowers? I want to pull something out of my truck that makes my wife and friends hide in a corner. Something that cleans up super quickly, makes me look and feel like an expert, and commands instant respect. Still talking about the straps, we found we had to add Velcro ties to roll up and manage the excess webbing so it didn’t catch on objects, or hang out of doors of work vehicles, or get in the way of the rope starter. We noticed, too, that the shoulder and waist straps tend to get filthy with dirt, sunscreen and sweaty armpit smells and this easily transfers to clean shirts especially if either the shirts or the straps become damp. What would be handy is if all the straps and harnesses were easier to remove than a series of torx fittings so they could be thrown in the washing machine at the end of the week with a load of dirty uniforms. Quarter-turn releases not dissimilar to the fuel caps on Stihl chainsaws would be ideal. They could be tightened as well and then the grip laid flat so it doesn’t interfere with comfort. A lot of these issues were carried forward from the BR600 and BR700 so when I saw the BR800 I was really confounded by the lack of thought and design lethargy that has continued with the Stihl brand. To this end I find the BR800 not fully satisfying. What I do love about the BR800 is the fuel pick-ups completely empty the tank while the Shindaiwa EB803 still has about 10% left in the tank when it starts to cough and splutter; the remaining 6 or 7 minutes then done leaning to one side so the tank can be fully utilised. I also like that the BR800 has an offset fuel inlet and a tethered, easy open fuel cap. It makes refuelling quick and there’s no need for a funnel or spout. But occasionally the tank will get a vapour lock and fuel will dribble out of somewhere and into the vehicle while the tank is around 90-100% full which then attracts dirt and makes the unit look untidy and dirty. In this state the engine can be hard to start too. When using the machine after a shortish break or even from cold, the engine will gulp or substantially throttle back before giving out the revs my finger is asking for and this is the same as the BR700, but we did find an overall improvement in the performance of the BR800 over the previous model if we decreased our angle of attack. What I mean by this is most people point their blowers at the ground at an angle of around 30-45 degrees but when air hits the ground it disperses and the effectiveness or “work” it performs is significantly decreased. We found that decreasing this angle to around 15 degrees significantly increased the speed at which we got jobs done or, in other words, we worked hard at blowing things that were further away to reduce the feathering of the air coming out of the end of the blower tube to maximise the forward pushing power of the air. Using this technique the BR700 cleaned up the outside of a block of apartments fairly consistently at 43 minutes but the BR800 at 35 minutes. When increasing our angles of attack such as in wet weather the times were a lot more similar. What I would love to see from Stihl is turning their backpack blower into a combi system. With a hip starting rope, the back hub could come off and a pull rearwards to engage a PTO and disengage the fan, the blower tube could come off (if needed) and a trimmer or flex shaft hedge cutter could attach like a bayonet fitting. This would solve a few problems for a few managers of large sites being able to carry multiple tools at once. What we also found was the throttle cable rubbed against the pleated tube, eventually making a series of holes in the side of the blower tube. In examining other machines I observed the same problem. It seems Stihl has indicated to dealers that they are reticent to continually replace these, so Stihl dealers will make your life difficult unless you start talking about small claims procedures or consumer protection rights such as the Australian Consumer Law or NCAT in New South Wales. I have attached a photo below of what I mean regarding the holes. A new pleated tube segment is around $50 each time you replace it, should you not reach another arrangement with your Stihl dealer. Since this wasn't a problem on any of the previous models, this is clearly a matter of "not of merchantable quality" or just a known design flaw. Finally, the BR800 is a more than adequate blower albeit only incrementally better than the BR700. Although I note we are nowhere near the weight, power, price, or size limits most professionals would expect from an all day professional machine and if you were doing a school, cemetery, shopping centre or apartments with no stairs you would still need to consider a towable or stand-on blower.
Stihl BGE 81
Very powerful missing a couple of features – This corded blower vac does a great job, however it does not have a progressive speed trigger, it's either on or off, which means you are constantly cycling the power button on the device Show details