Unfortunately, this deal has expired 16 January 2022.
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Posted 12 January 2022
Titan TTL758CHN 2000W 230V Electric 40cm Chainsaw £34.99 + 2 Year Guarantee (free click and collect) @ Screwfix
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Chanchi32 Deal editor
Joined in 2013
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About this deal
This deal is expired. Here are some options that might interest you:
Titan TTL758CHN 2000W 230V Electric 40cm Chainsaw back down to £34.99. Free collection to store.
Titan TTL758CHN 2000W 230V Corded 40cm Electric Chainsaw (719FG)
Electric chainsaw with powerful motor and automatic chain lubrication. Chain brake activates in less than 0.1 seconds for added operator safety. Suitable for cutting firewood.
Specs
Delivery / Returns
Titan TTL758CHN 2000W 230V Corded 40cm Electric Chainsaw (719FG)
Electric chainsaw with powerful motor and automatic chain lubrication. Chain brake activates in less than 0.1 seconds for added operator safety. Suitable for cutting firewood.
- 40cm Bar
- 2000W
- Oregon Full-Skip Low-Profile Chamfer Chisel Chain
- 14.5m/sec Chain Speed
- Pre-Lubricated Seals
- Multi-Tool Supplied for Manual Chain Tensioning
- Mechanical Brake
- 2 Year Manufacturer's Guarantee (T&Cs Apply)
- You must be 18 years old or over to buy this product
Specs
- Adjustability Multi-Tool Supplied for Manual Chain Tensioning
- Bar Length (Imperial) 16 "
- Bar Length (Metric) 40 cm
- Brand Titan
- Brushless Brushed
- Cable Length 3 m
- Chain Gauge (Imperial) 0.050 "
- Chain Gauge (Metric) 1.3 mm
- Chain Pitch 3/8 "
- Chain Speed 14.5 m/sec
- Corded or Cordless Corded
- Corded Tool Weight 5.3 kg
- Fuel Type Garden Power Electric
- Manual or Powered Powered
- Manufacturer Guarantee 2 Year Manufacturer's Guarantee (T&Cs Apply)
- Model No TTL758CHN
- No. of Drive Links 56
- Pack Size 1
- Pieces in Pack/Case 1
- Power Output (Watts/Kw) 2000 W
- Power Supply Electric
- Power Voltage Supply 230 V
- Product Type Chainsaw
- Total Product Weight 5.5 kg
- Vibration Level 6.3 m/s²
- Vibration System No Anti-Vibration System
Delivery / Returns
- Free colllection to store / delivery £5 or free over £50 spend
- Free 30 days returns - returns policy (https://www.screwfix.com/help/returns/)
More details at
Community Updates
51 Comments
sorted byIt will cut branches up to about 3" thick in one cut - we took down a huge overgrown buddleia with it. Hard work as the wood is very hard but much easier and quicker than with a hand saw.
If you used a hedge trimmer to get rid of the outside leaves, you could do the woody bits with the chainsaw. It won't be neat though.
It doesn't come with oil so you need to buy that at the same time - around a fiver usually. Also, buy a face protector before you use it, especially if you are cutting up fence panels. The helmets with the flip down visor are good. Otherwise wood chips will hit you in the face and might hit you in the eye causing serious damage.
For anyone worried about safety issues, the saw blade stops instantly when you let go of the button. Which is to say, it's near impossible to accidentally cut your leg off, which is what I was most worried about. (edited)
A typical trick of chainsaws including this one is for the chain to leap off and try and take your eye out when cutting thin flexible branches. Skinny flexible branches makes the chain bar shake, and skip off the rotor.
Its not the tool for that, I'd be using loppers for that as it's safer.and probably quicker This is for quite solid bits of wood.
It has a small window on the side. Bought a bottle of oil for around £7 for litre. Have used it for 3 sessions of 4 hours. Topped it up twice. Takes around 200ml maybe but more. Not going to cost a fortune but is essential for use.
I'd go further and suggest a hard hat with ear defenders and a mesh visor when using a chainsaw for head/neck protection.
Ear defenders I guess are optional but the other two I am forever thankful for after the chainsaw caught the bottom corner of my visor once, which would have been my neck if I hadn't been wearing it.
Made a stupid mistake when tired and should have stopped before I got to that point.
hmm but surely it's
Yeah looks like a standard Oregon chain- Oregon 91PJ056X
I can't imagine the motor is anything other than a budget brushed unit that some standard brushes will fit.
Similar for bearings.
What else is there to break? (edit: apart from destroying the casing) (edited)
if you have to ask dumb questions like this. then my opinion would be you shouldn't be going near a chainsaw
Remember to top up oil frequently.
Edit. Ah Oregon chain so probably unless it’s an odd size? (edited)
Well impressed
Make sure you buy the oil with this
I just bought. The no nonsense chainsaw oil from Screwfix
Never used it
Why
Because im a man
I've completely cut down a couple of decent sized trees with the Mountfield they used to sell that was near identical to this, apart from a nicer chain adjuster and a longer cable*.
*Which wasn't longer for long!
Ditto, does a good job round the garden. I don't have huge trees, but deals with up to 25cm diameter branches fine. Worth the money.
Not really, unless it's got very thick branches. If it's a hedge you'd normally cut with a hedge trimmer then no. It could be dangerous because it would bounce about.
Un-asked for suggestion:
Sabre/reciprocating saw with pruning blade.
Superb for those 'medium' sort of branches that most non-petrol hedge trimmers can't cope with. Precision quite easy. (With the added bonus if you don't have one that sabre saws are ridiculously versatile.)
They're all alright, really. I've a shiny cordless, but lots of cheapies about. Though a good blade definitely worth it for wet wood.
These have been great. Done some hefty-ish tree dropping with them, but just fall through branches up to c.4" thick:
Bosch Professional 2608650676 5 pieces Sabre Saw Blade S 1531 L Top for Wood (for wood, 240 x 19 x 1.5 mm, sabre saw accessories), Blue amazon.co.uk/dp/…c=1
If it's something like a laurel then yeah.
If they are long logs and can be secured safely (like in a saw horse for example) it will certainly cut them into smaller logs, but you really need an axe to split them if they need splitting once they are cut into logs. (edited)
I keep having chainsaw oil lines split /rupture though over winter months, not sure why. This and a petrol one I had before of a different brand.
yes - bought one and did exactly the same thing.
this lot (the sensible ones) are 100% right though: you'll need to adhere to all health and safety guidance. if in doubt, hire someone to do the job - you can't replace limbs.
Unfortunately the hedges have overgrown by some margin and need to come off by one to two feet... A domestic hedge trimmer probably wouldn't cope with thicker branches
cheers OP!
If it’s too thick for hedge trimmer’s then yeah this would do it, wouldn’t be the neatest of jobs but an acceptable job is definitely possible with a chainsaw.
re - the chain comes off. sound like you have the wrong size chain. read the manual again.
Excellent..... Any recommendations? It's only a one off cut then it'll be well maintained with a domestic hedge trimmer I already own....
Thanks for posting