ALM Replacement Lo-Kick Chain 3/8 x 52 Links for 35cm Chainsaws 350mm
100 ratings
TO EXPLORE MORE
Price: £17.95
Brand: ALM
Description: The ALM Manufacturing Replacement Chainsaw Chains to fit a wide range of chainsaw makes and models. The ALMCH052 Chainsaw Chain has a 3/8 inch Low profile (L/P), 0.043in guide bar slot 0.375 mm and Low profile (L/P) 1.3 mm guide bar slot. This chain is made to fit the B&Q /Homelite /Husqvarna /Makita /Mc Culloch /Performance Power /Ryobi ranges and suit saws with a 35cm bar and chain with 52 drive links including:PP350C, PWR33cc CSA, PWR1750CSA, PWR1750CSB, PWR1750CSC, PWR1750CSD, PWR1800CSB, PWR1800CSC, PWR1800CSD, TRY1800CSA 1800w /CSP3314, HCS3335 /236 /Makita UC3520A /Mac 335, Mac 338, Mac 435, Mac 436, Mac 438, Mac 838 /PCN3335. Additional Information: Bar Size: 35cm Links: 52. ALM Replacement Lo-Kick Chain 3/8 x 52 Links for 35cm Chainsaws 350mm - shop the best deal online on diy-compared.co.uk
Category: Garden Tools
Merchant: Tooled Up
Product ID: 168973
Delivery cost: 4.95
EAN: 5016531605206
MPN: CH052
RRP: 18.24
My website utilises affiliate links when you click my 'Get the best deal now' buttons. If you buy something through one of these links, I may earn a little commission, at no extra cost to you.
I have relationships with many of the top online retailers (purchasing, shipping and returns will be handled directly by them) which enables me to offer the best deal online for the ALM Replacement Lo-Kick Chain 3/8 x 52 Links for 35cm Chainsaws 350mm and many other similar products - which will appear below, to enhance your online shopping experience.
For even more great deals on ALM Garden Tools, click the link.
Author: Antony de-VOS
Rating: 5
Review: Excellent value for money, works well on my B&Q electric chain saw.
Author: d green
Rating: 4
Review: The ownership of a good chainsaw is a grave responsibility. Skill in its use is a duty owed by man to his maker. But the possession of a replacement blade of the quality of the ALM Manufacturing CH052 is a sanctity known to but few men this side of Valhalla. I'll never forget my father's advice when he gave me my first petrol-engined saw. `Take a firm grip,' he said. 'Make sure of your footing. And write your blood group on your forehead with a marker pen, in case you pass out before you get to the hospital.' As I removed the gleaming, oiled 3/8-inch blade from its protective sheath, I briefly foresaw that moment of inattention which comes eventually upon every power-saw hobbyist; that instant when shards of razor-keen carbon steel cleave remorselessly into a stumbling foot, or between the fingers of a careless hand, spraying his surprised, slack-jawed face with a fine mist of blood, bone and gristle. Testing the weight of its 52 cunningly-wrought links in my living fingers, I wondered if I could change gear *and* steer the car one-handed as far as the nearest A&E. Or if I would be better off staggering into the middle of the closest main road and begging passing motorists to dial 999. I put the blade back in its packaging, and turned away from the log pile. Maybe this winter I could just turn up the central heating instead.