£194.70
Make sure this fits by entering your model number. Roll cutter with particularly high cutting capacity for paper or similar materials such as labels, photos and film material The paper cutter is suitable for a maximum of DIN A1 format in portrait and landscape format, as well as DIN A0 in portrait format
The Dahle 446 rotary trimmer is a perfect tool for a professional cutting performance. – Cutting performance: 25 pages 80 g/m² paper – Cutting length: 920 mm – Cutting height: 2.5 mm – Table size: 1120 x 384 mm – Weight: 7.7 kg – User friendly trimmer for professional use – Sturdy metal table with non-slip rubber feet – Paper can be cut in portrait format up to a size of DIN A1 and in landscape format up to a size of DIN A0 if the cutting machine is orientated vertically – Practical format lines on the table in mm scale facilitate the alignment of the material to be cut – Ground circular blade in a secured cutterhead for precise and superior cuts – Ground lower blade for exact cutting results – Adjustable and lockable backstop to fix paper precisely – High-quality blades made of hardened steel for long-lasting cutting quality – Rolling blade in secured cutterhead ensures maximum safety – Two scale bars – GS certified – German Engineered by Dahle
Make sure this fits by entering your model number. Roll cutter with particularly high cutting capacity for paper or similar materials such as labels, photos and film material The paper cutter is suitable for a maximum of DIN A1 format in portrait and landscape format, as well as DIN A0 in portrait format Stable metal table with non-slip rubber feet Orientation lines in DIN, cm, inch as well as grade divisions on the cutting board Ground round knife in closed plastic head and ground lower knife – both knives made of hardened special steel The automatic pressing fixes the cut material of the cutting machine With two angle units, mm-scale and adjustable backgauge
Dahle
Brand: Dahle
00446-20421
116 x 21 x 49.2 cm; 7.02 Kilograms
Blue
1
920 mm
70
FBA_B000NJXYL0
7.02 kg
16 Feb. 2007