• PHOTO BY B ILL GEMM ELL mess Anthony Paytas and the Solar Mower. Solar-powered lawn mower shines as an example of Israeli high-tech `conversion.' JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER suburban staple — the lowly push mower —is riding the crest of new wave crashing through the high-tech halls of Tel Aviv, Haifa and N Jerusalem. And behind it are a Bloom- field Hills banker and a War- ren engineer who have harnessed Israeli know-how to create a machine that is safe to use, quieter than a vacuum cleaner, environmentally friend- ly and maintenance-free. Selwyn Isakow, 43, owns the world- wide patent rights to the Solar Mower, a sleek, sun-powered lawn mower that uses solar panels manufactured by Israel Air- craft Industries of Tel Aviv in conjunc- tion with Chromagen, a company based near Nazareth. The pricetag is fairly astounding — $895 — but costs are expected to decline by 10 to 20 percent as the machine's pop- ularity takes off and regulations on the use of gas-powered mowers creep in. In fact, Mr. Isakow said, a distribution network is in place in 51 countries and thousands of inquiries have been made to Solar Power International, the com- pany he operates with Anthony Paytas, the mower's inventor. `There are about 17 million push mow- ers sold around the world. We're looking at selling 200,000 annually. Our research shows the market out there is somewhere close to five times that amount," he said. "It's probably going to make an in- credibly huge impact on the world," added Mr. Paytas, 57. "The dependency on fos- sil fuels is a finite situation. Eventually we're going to run out. To have devices that function with a lack of fossil fuels is a blessing for people who have to pay exorbitant prices for gasoline as they do in Europe or in disad- vantaged countries where there is no gaso- line or fossil fuels. "It has everything go- ing for it and literally no downsides," he said. "We've got the finest of all components in this thing." The 21-inch, full- mulching mower leaves nothing in its wake ex- cept a tidy lawn. With a simple height adjust- ment, it is able to cut down even field grass and can be outfitted with a "weed whip" and other accessories that can be used to power other appliances. Selwyn Isakow The mower can be submerged in water and still work, an ex- periment Paytas tried in a neighbor's pool. Charging the Solar Mower takes roughly eight hours, but an optional charger will cut the time to about three hours. A 12-volt battery keeps it going even at night. The machine will be formally intro- duced at a lawn and garden tech show next month in Louisville, Ky. Mr. Paytas started Mower Medic in Warren in 1988, the same year he built a rough model of the Solar Mower. His persistence led him to Mr. Isakow's Ox- ford Investment Group. Solar Power International plans to market the machine through retailers and distributors in the United States, where half of the mowers are expected to be sold. A North Carolina factory is man- ufacturing them. Mr. Isakow believes there is a revolu- tion under way in Israel's industrial sec- tor as companies strive to shift their operations from strictly defense-oriented goods to consumer prod- ucts. "The big breakthrough is we've taken a military and public works compa- ny (Israel Aircraft Indus- tries) and converted to one of the very few consumer programs. That is one of its recent charters, to con- vert more of its business into consumer products," he said. Mark Talisman is a Washington, D.C., con- sultant who helped write legislation promoting solar power over 20 years ago and once headed up the national Council of Jewish Federations. When he heard about Mr. Isakow's venture, he immedi- ately got on the phone with a friend at Chromagen. RAY RIDING page 39