WORX 12 Amp TRIVAC 3-in-1 Electric Leaf Blower/Mulcher/Yard Vacuum - WG512

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars | 12,806 ratings

Price: 94.85

Last update: 12-23-2024


About this item

TRIVAC 3-IN-1 DESIGN: Leaf blower, mulcher, vacuum in one for efficient yard work.
POWERFUL AIRFLOW: Delivers 600 CFM for clearing large areas with less effort.
EFFICIENT 16:1 MULCH RATIO: Reduce workload by mulching 16 bags of leaves into one.
EASY TO USE: A quick-release bag for hassle-free composting or collection, allowing for one-handed operation.
2 SPEEDS: Suitable for both tight corners and open lawns.
INCLUDES: Worx Trivac with 600 CFM and 12A motor, 1.4 Bushel Collection Bag.

Product information


Top reviews from the United States

  • T- bone
    5.0 out of 5 stars Big bang for your buck !!
    Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2024
    The media could not be loaded.
    Easy to operate. Does a great job for residential needs. The mulching is incredible. There is dust from the bag when you start it up between emptying, so wear a mask. I would suggest only filling the collector bag up maybe 3/4 full to prevent problems with stressing the seams. But it does such a great job mulching, the bag 1/2 to 3/4 full gets quite heavy. The collector bag is a good size. It was easy to handle. You just have to let it find its own position and don’t fight it.
    The vacuum was powerful enough to quickly and efficiently suck up leaves and small sticks, but not enough to pick up stones. So I could use it with confidence.
    The blower moved a lot of air with high velocity. I didn’t experience any issues with the collector bag and after using it 4 hours clearing leaves and little sticks and general yard debris I didn’t have any problems and I inspected the impeller after I was finished and there wasn’t a mark on it.
    In heavier leaves, I gently bounced it up and down just slightly to improve the performance.
    I only wish that it had a tapered extension for the blower to improve direction and maybe a slightly higher velocity.
    Overall, I was very satisfied, and it went beyond my expectations.
  • Stephen Throop
    5.0 out of 5 stars big bore blower
    Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2020
    I have 20 deciduous trees, including 7 with trunks thicker than two feet at breast height. Autumn winds add leaves from across the street. I mulch: just run over the lawn and put the mower away. I can clear 400 square feet a minute with my walking mower. With the chute blocked, my riding mower will mulch 1100 square feet a minute. What’s more, the leaf particles help the soil. Pin oak used to give me messy results because the leaves resist fine chopping. I’ve done better since I discovered that a 1/2” belt sander gives blades a better edge than an angle grinder.

    I wanted a vacuum for places that are hard to reach with a walking mower or a rake. When I saw that the Worx WG512 is also a high-volume, low-velocity blower, I bought it. (A landscaper suggests 600 cubic feet a minute, minimum, to blow leaves on a lawn.)

    In the carport, it lets me remove leaves without removing what’s stored along the wall. It’s similarly convenient on steps, on the porch, behind shrubbery, and along fences and walls. It mulches most leaves almost like sawdust.

    I had to stoop to get the vacuum nozzle down near the ground. Lengthening the bag’s shoulder strap fixed that. Changing it from a blower to a vacuum entails rotating the weight of the motor aft. That made it tiring to hold. The designer thought of that. To vacuum, you move your hand to the rear section of the handle.

    It blew pin oak leaves off a driveway better than other blowers I’ve tried. Vacuuming the pile was slow, and the pieces in the bag were too big to call mulch. The next time, I bagged the pile with my walking mower, which was much quicker. I tossed the coarse contents on a patch of grass and mulched with the same mower. The sharp blade produced pieces small enough to disappear when I dispersed them with the blower.

    The cord hook requires bending an extension cord sharply. That’s detrimental. A hole at the back of the handle looks as if it were made for a string. I was about to make a loop of cord with a cord lock to cinch an extension cord, but then I remembered the drawstring, with a cord lock, on a bag I intended to discard. The loop is 12” long, and the photo shows that it’s a good length.

    The blower won’t plug into an extension cord unless the hots and neutrals are aligned. You have to look closely to see the difference. I made it easier with a piece of pink tape. The ground on the extension cord should be on that side.

    Some years, autumn leaves may remain in valleys on my roof. By holding moisture, they can cause damage, especially during freezes. I don’t like pushing leaves off a roof with a broom. One year I used a borrowed blower from a ladder. It didn’t do the job and, with a velocity faster than a Category 5 hurricane, it could break seals on shingles.

    I tried the Worx WG512 from a ladder. Its larger volume did the trick. The muzzle velocity is lower than a Category 1 hurricane, so it’s unlikely to cause trouble. I saw no flapping shingle tabs.

    In one matter, my lack of knowledge kept the blower out of service overnight, and I almost broke it. A stick the size of a pencil jammed the impeller the first day. I couldn’t get the orange debris shield off. The 2x2” drawing in the manual seemed to say to push it forward, then lift. Even prying with a screwdriver didn’t work. I quit, slept on it, and checked the manual again in the morning. Then I risked breaking it by prying hard with two screwdrivers.

    When it was off, I saw the latch and saw that it was operated by a sliding knob. Because the knob is flat and black like the handle, I hadn’t realized it was a moving part. If I’d known there was a knob, I would have interpreted drawing as the manufacturer intended. I used pink tape to show how conspicuous the knob would be if it were orange like the other moving parts. I’m glad I didn’t break my new blower!
    Customer image
    Stephen Throop
    5.0 out of 5 stars big bore blower
    Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2020
    I have 20 deciduous trees, including 7 with trunks thicker than two feet at breast height. Autumn winds add leaves from across the street. I mulch: just run over the lawn and put the mower away. I can clear 400 square feet a minute with my walking mower. With the chute blocked, my riding mower will mulch 1100 square feet a minute. What’s more, the leaf particles help the soil. Pin oak used to give me messy results because the leaves resist fine chopping. I’ve done better since I discovered that a 1/2” belt sander gives blades a better edge than an angle grinder.

    I wanted a vacuum for places that are hard to reach with a walking mower or a rake. When I saw that the Worx WG512 is also a high-volume, low-velocity blower, I bought it. (A landscaper suggests 600 cubic feet a minute, minimum, to blow leaves on a lawn.)

    In the carport, it lets me remove leaves without removing what’s stored along the wall. It’s similarly convenient on steps, on the porch, behind shrubbery, and along fences and walls. It mulches most leaves almost like sawdust.

    I had to stoop to get the vacuum nozzle down near the ground. Lengthening the bag’s shoulder strap fixed that. Changing it from a blower to a vacuum entails rotating the weight of the motor aft. That made it tiring to hold. The designer thought of that. To vacuum, you move your hand to the rear section of the handle.

    It blew pin oak leaves off a driveway better than other blowers I’ve tried. Vacuuming the pile was slow, and the pieces in the bag were too big to call mulch. The next time, I bagged the pile with my walking mower, which was much quicker. I tossed the coarse contents on a patch of grass and mulched with the same mower. The sharp blade produced pieces small enough to disappear when I dispersed them with the blower.

    The cord hook requires bending an extension cord sharply. That’s detrimental. A hole at the back of the handle looks as if it were made for a string. I was about to make a loop of cord with a cord lock to cinch an extension cord, but then I remembered the drawstring, with a cord lock, on a bag I intended to discard. The loop is 12” long, and the photo shows that it’s a good length.

    The blower won’t plug into an extension cord unless the hots and neutrals are aligned. You have to look closely to see the difference. I made it easier with a piece of pink tape. The ground on the extension cord should be on that side.

    Some years, autumn leaves may remain in valleys on my roof. By holding moisture, they can cause damage, especially during freezes. I don’t like pushing leaves off a roof with a broom. One year I used a borrowed blower from a ladder. It didn’t do the job and, with a velocity faster than a Category 5 hurricane, it could break seals on shingles.

    I tried the Worx WG512 from a ladder. Its larger volume did the trick. The muzzle velocity is lower than a Category 1 hurricane, so it’s unlikely to cause trouble. I saw no flapping shingle tabs.

    In one matter, my lack of knowledge kept the blower out of service overnight, and I almost broke it. A stick the size of a pencil jammed the impeller the first day. I couldn’t get the orange debris shield off. The 2x2” drawing in the manual seemed to say to push it forward, then lift. Even prying with a screwdriver didn’t work. I quit, slept on it, and checked the manual again in the morning. Then I risked breaking it by prying hard with two screwdrivers.

    When it was off, I saw the latch and saw that it was operated by a sliding knob. Because the knob is flat and black like the handle, I hadn’t realized it was a moving part. If I’d known there was a knob, I would have interpreted drawing as the manufacturer intended. I used pink tape to show how conspicuous the knob would be if it were orange like the other moving parts. I’m glad I didn’t break my new blower!
    Images in this review
    Customer image Customer image Customer image Customer image
  • DeeK
    4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent mulch (and dust) creator
    Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2024
    This is an amazing tool to mulch leaves - making it easy to clean up behind garages, corners of foundation, et. Sucks leaves hi p instead of blowing away existing mulch as leaf blowers do. And puts to use extra leaves / saving money and looks amazing with golden mulch color that mixes into soil so well. But be prepared to get DUSTY. A fine dust comes out of mulching bag, especially if it's dry out. Also a bit noisy. Otherwise an amazing way to manage leaves. You'll need someone to help rake large volume of leaves into as pile first, but this is best for clearing leaves around foundation, walkways, etc and repurpose for flower bed.
  • Cori
    5.0 out of 5 stars Life saver!
    Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2024
    This has made fall cleanup so much easier. The grinding functions takes leaves and makes them almost into powder. Careful because it's very dusty so you will be covered in leaf dust particles at the end of cleanup. The blowing function also works really great, lots of power with several speeds to use to clean up a garage or a large backyard. I would recommend ordering extension cords at the same time of purchase to make sure you have enough length to do the job
  • Alex
    5.0 out of 5 stars Works on damp leaves even some wet.
    Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2024
    I just got done finishing up a large Maple. I blew everything into a pile about 10 feet by 20 feet by 2 feet tall. The leaves on the bottom were wet. The rest were damp. I used the Vacuum Mulch feature and it took about 2 hours to vacuum the pile up. I do not have the garbage can adaptor. I had to empty the bag 17 times. I got 2 Worx bags per 1 lawn bag. I could have got 3 but that would have been too heavy of a lawn bag since everything was wet.

    Overall the the blower works fine and it is very powerful. The Vacuum mulcher exceeded expectations. It really ground up the leaves, even the wet ones. I had one clog and had to manually clear it by releasing the vacuum blower lever and reaching in to clear the clog. I didn't put the bag back on and could not figure out why the vacuum did not work but the blower did. For the vacuum to work, it requires a bag or hose to be attached.

    For just over $100 this is an excellent buy. It feels durable and well build. The bag release is well designed.

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