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Posted
2 hours ago, lurkalot said:

Trouble is, like most Stihl screws, they're self threading, which means unless they've been in and out a few times they're likely to be pretty stuck in there.  What caused them to shear off in the first place, that worries me a bit.

No idea, most likely sold to me that way. I guess it had two good bolts remaining and one over the last three years stripped its thread and the last remaining good one backed off slowly.

Posted
2 hours ago, Jwoodgardenmaintenance said:

Could you not put a nut over the hole where screw is and tac weld it to it then just unscrew it like that? 

 

Jack

Its sheared below the flush. 

  • Like 1
Posted
Just now, eggsarascal said:

A picture would help, could you not use a stud extractor?

I dont have an issue doing the job. :)  It was more a post on the cheapo strimmer and if anyone has any experiance with them. :D 

 

Im in Norway just now so cant start till I get home.

Posted
Just now, trigger_andy said:

I dont have an issue doing the job. :)  It was more a post on the cheapo strimmer and if anyone has any experiance with them. :D 

 

Im in Norway just now so cant start till I get home.

Hairy muff.

Posted

Bit late perhaps, but I've got the SGS 52CC strimmer in your original post. (Or a very similar model anyway).

 

For my needs (non commercial but an acre or so to keep on top of) it's been good. It's quite heavy, thirsty at full chat, and the line feed is fiddly to reload. So, I use it with the blade all the time, and it munches through anything, usually on mid revs. Starts easily, runs well, powerful, good price. Harness is a bit awkward, and it's not that comfy to use for hours at a time, but I'm not sure any hefty strimmer would be. I used to have an old Stihl of some sort, much lighter and less vibration, but much less powerful, and probably 4 times the cost.

 

I like it.

  • Thanks 1

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