@Kyminibiker thanks for the link. I am sure this deal was appreciated by many.
#35 chain is really pretty wimpy,
#35 chain is built to a minimum tensile strength standard of 1760 pounds. That is 260 pounds
MORE than the standard for #41 chain. Average tensile strength number is about 100 pounds more, and quality kart chain such as EK and RLV exceed ANSI specs. #35 "space chain" is the same pitch, but uses #41 pin specifications.
#35 is not an actual roller chain, where #4x is. #41 is a lot better
#35 chain standards require a roller of .200 inches maximum. Note the use of the term "Roller" in the ANSI standard. What you are referring to is "roller bearing" that fits within the chain roller- which is not preferable in cases where a chain comes in contact with abrasives like dirt, unless it is sealed with an O ring. Solid roller chain (that is what it is called) is much slower wearing, and preferred over roller bearing in the kart racing world. (Note the article comparing EK, DID, HAT 219 kart chain)
@crazycarts4us to determine the chain you need, you measure the pitch of your sprockets.
Here is a nice write up OldMiniBikes did for several aspects of maintenance, including measuring for chain pitch. Scroll half way down the page.