At a glance
I’ve had five different electric strimmers leaning against the shed at one point or another this season, which is more than any one plot needs but does mean I’ve got a proper feel for how they actually stack up against each other now most of the cutting’s done for the year. Running them back to back rather than one at a time changes the picture more than I expected, the small annoyances stand out and the real strengths stop looking like luck.
They cover a wide spread, from a light 280 watt line trimmer right up to a 900 watt machine with two different cutting systems built in, so they’re not really fighting for the same buyer, but having all five side by side helps more than reading about one in isolation.
How I tested these. Every machine here got a full season’s worth of real use on my own plot, not just a few minutes on a tidy lawn, including a proper run at overgrown edges and, where the head allowed it, actual brambles and weeds rather than just grass.
Quick verdict summary
All 5 electric strimmers ranked
The most powerful machine in this batch by a clear margin, and it backs that up with two cutting heads rather than one, light line for tidying and a heavier dual line for proper overgrowth. The curved shaft took a session to get used to but ended up the thing I noticed most once I’d stopped fighting it.
It’s the heaviest tool here too, and the official spec sheet on the manufacturer’s own site somehow lists the weight as 0.0032 kilograms, a fraction of a gram, an error so far off it’s not even worth treating as a real second figure.
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The telescopic handle on this one let me get the head underneath a bush nothing else in the shed had managed, and the weight figure is the one place in this whole batch where every document I checked actually agreed with the others. Small thing, but rarer than it should be.
The box promises three spare spools, the manual’s own parts list names none, and the warranty length depends entirely on whether you believe the website or the retailer. Strong machine let down by paperwork rather than performance.
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600 watts and a telescopic shaft that swivels into an edger, and the cable’s the longest integral lead of any machine here, properly useful on a bigger plot without reaching for an extension.
Four different weight figures across the manufacturer’s own documents though, and the warranty length shifts depending on whether you’re reading the UK site, the commercial tier, or the Irish version of the same listing. Trust the manual over the marketing on this one.
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Twist the head and the same machine becomes an edger guided by its own little wheel, the most useful conversion of the lot for getting a dead straight line along a path. Built in cable hooks on the body are a small detail that’s saved me more than once.
The manual can’t agree with itself on whether the line feed is manual or automatic, two different sections, two different answers, and mine behaves like the automatic one despite what the spec table claims.
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The lightest machine here and the cheapest feeling motor, 280 watts is plenty for a small lawn edge and nothing more, no edging function, no telescopic shaft, just a trimmer doing one job.
The weight alone has three different figures depending which of Bosch’s own documents you read, and the line feed has been properly inconsistent on mine, sometimes under feeding, once over feeding for no reason I could pin down.
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Head to head comparison
| Model | Power | Width | Edging | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BLACK+DECKER GL9035-GB | 900W | 35cm | Limited, maintain only | 4.2 / 5 |
| Einhell GC-ET 4530 | 450W | 30cm | Yes, swivel head | 4.0 / 5 |
| Hyundai HYTR600E | 600W | 290 to 300mm | Yes, swivel head | 4.0 / 5 |
| Flymo Contour XT | 300W | 25cm | Yes, guide wheel | 3.6 / 5 |
| Bosch EasyGrassCut 23 | 280W | 23cm | No | 3.5 / 5 |
What to look for when buying
Power is the first real split across this group. The 280 to 450 watt machines here are line trimmers first and foremost, fine for grass and light weeds but not built to fight anything with a proper stem. Once you’re up around 600 watts the cutting gets noticeably more confident, and the 900 watt BLACK+DECKER is the only one of the five with a second, heavier line system built in specifically for overgrowth rather than just relying on a bigger motor to push a thin line through.
Edging is genuinely a separate feature rather than something every trimmer just has. Flymo, Einhell and Hyundai all swivel the head into a dedicated edging mode with a guide wheel. Bosch has nothing of the sort. BLACK+DECKER sits in between, the head can be used for edging but the manual itself is clear it’s meant for maintaining an edge that already exists rather than cutting a new one from scratch.
Don’t trust the weight printed on the box. Four of the five machines in this batch had at least one real discrepancy in their own official paperwork, in one case an error so large it’s clearly just a typo. Only the Einhell’s weight figure held up consistently everywhere I checked it.
Telescopic shafts and edging conversions both sound like a tick box feature until you’ve used one. Einhell and Hyundai both have a genuinely useful amount of height adjustment, while BLACK+DECKER’s only stretches about ten centimetres and Bosch doesn’t adjust at all. None of that shows up on a spec sheet the way it shows up on your back after an hour of trimming.
Warranty length turned out to be just as inconsistent as the weight figures across this batch, with Einhell, Hyundai and Flymo all giving different answers depending on whether you check the manufacturer’s own site, the retailer, or the manual in the box. Worth checking your specific paperwork rather than assuming the headline figure on the listing is the one that applies.
Final verdict and recommendations
For real overgrowth and the most power on tap: the BLACK+DECKER GL9035-GB. Heavier than the rest, but the dual cutting system means it’s doing two different jobs properly rather than just being a bigger version of the same one.
For the most reliable paperwork alongside strong performance: the Einhell GC-ET 4530. The only machine in this batch where the weight figure didn’t move depending on which document you read.
For the longest reach and a genuinely useful edging conversion: the Hyundai HYTR600E. Just verify the spec you’re relying on against the manual rather than the website.
For a dedicated edging wheel that actually improves your line: the Flymo Contour XT. The conversion between trimming and edging is the best executed of the three that offer it.
For a small lawn and nothing more demanding: the Bosch EasyGrassCut 23. Light, simple, and honest about being a basic tool rather than pretending otherwise.
The BLACK+DECKER GL9035-GB is the strongest all rounder of the five, but match the machine to the size of the job rather than chasing the biggest motor on the page. None of these spec sheets are quite as trustworthy as they look.
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