Thu, 8 January 2009 Post By Online Shopping Store
- Clearing width: 18"
- Capacity: 700 lbs per minute
- Throw distance: 30'
- Weight: 24 pounds
- Adjustable Chute (160 degrees)
Comes with a two year full manufacturer warranty from Toro -- the makers of the world's best snow throwers and snow blowers.
Lightweight and hardworking, Toro electric snowthrowers and snowblowers tackle snow with power and maneuverability.
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Toro, Power Shovel, Electric Snow Thrower, 7.5 Amp Series-Wound Motor, 12" Clearing Width, 6" Intake Height, Push Drive System, Poly V-Belt Auger Drive System, Can Move Up To 300 LBS Of Snow Per Minute, Up To 20' Throw Distance, Lightweight Design At Only 13 LBS, Compact Size For Easy Storage, Safety Key Lock, 2 Year Full Warranty. |
This is an age where images of war appear on our television screens like real-life extensions of some teenager's computer game. Technology and modern weaponry so dominates the battlefield that the public expects conflicts to be won without casualties, much less deaths, among its armed forces. It is all a far cry from a time not so long ago when one famous commander called the machine gun an 'interesting but over-rated' weapon and sent men to their deaths in their thousands while he tried to prove his theory. The new generation, it seems, simply would not tolerate the sight of another sea of white crosses or further additions to the thousands of names that stare out from the moving memorials at the Menin Gate, or Thiepval, or the Somme, or Normandy. Smart bombs, laser missiles, satellite guided shells...these are what win modern wars. Perhaps that is so. But, in these days of advanced technology and equipment, it is often forgotten that ordinary soldiers still fight with their rifles and their pistols and that their lives depend on their skill with personal weapons, even during modern wars. 'Death In Their Hands' looks at the reality of combat with small arms and traces the development of weapons such as pistols, sub-machine guns, assault rifles, flame-throwers, anti-tank weapons, mortars and machine guns. The twentieth century saw dramatic developments in this type of weaponry and there is little sign of a slowdown during these early years of the new millennium. From the muzzle-loading muskets and bolt-action rifles to electromagnetically propelled 'noiseless' bullets, 'Death In Their Hands' provides a fascinating insight into how the humble foot soldier fights a warThis product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply. |
Powerful torch flame will light your cigars to perfection. Keep one with you at all times and you will always be ready for that next cigar.Tags : FlameThrowerBlack
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Powerful torch flame will light your cigars to perfection. Keep one with you at all times and you will always be ready for that next cigar.Tags : FlameThrowerBlue
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The IDEAL ABS Tester (Almost a Butt Set) is a simple to use tester for basic troubleshooting of analog voice system installations. It monitors phone lines for dial tone quality and presence of power, tests for correct jack polarity (detects reversed tip and ring), and indicates call addressing for correct telephone extensions.The IDEAL ABS Signal Thrower can be used with the mated ABS Tester to trace and locate cables. The ABS Signal Thrower snaps on to the Lanyard attachment on the ABS Tester when not in use. Although designed as an enhanced subassembly to the ABS Tester, the ABS Signal Thrower may be used with any audio frequency range signal-tracing device. |
This brand new seven-card pack of cards contains a hot new weapon that all Zombie Fluxx fans are going to want for their Fluxx deck - a Flame Thrower! The other 6 cards are Zombie Creepers, with all new artwork not found in the first edition of the game. Includes a Zombie Ballerina and Zombie Boyscouts! |
The perfect companion for the Weed Dragon torch kit. Best suited for LP gas cylinders up to 40-lbs. (10 gallons). Features a single handle so operator can use the torch and move dolly simultaneously. Includes a torch bracket to store torch when not in use. Constructed of rugged welded tubular steel with two 7in. steel wheels, dual ball bearings and a solid 5/8in. axle. Max. load capacity is 100-lbs. |
Here is a review by maxx
Overboard was one of the first 3d games of its time and the grapics are not disapointing the object of the game is to get in your little boat and to go around islands and up rivers to find pieces of treasure map. But its not that easy because theres loads of pirates trying to stop you and you will need to keep your weapons stocks up. I think this is a classic and for this price whats the point in not buying it?Tags : Overboard
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Jack Whyte has written a lyrical epic, retelling the myths behind the boy who would become the Man Who Would Be King--Arthur Pendragon. He has shown us, as Diana Gabaldon said, "the bone beneath the flesh of legend." In his last book in this series, we witnessed the young king pull the sword from the stone and begin his journey to greatness. Now we reach the tale itself-how the most shining court in history was made. Clothar is a young man of promise. He has been sent from the wreckage of Gaul to one of the few schools remaining, where logic and rhetoric are taught along with battle techniques that will allow him to survive in the cruel new world where the veneer of civilization is held together by barbarism. He is sent by his mentor on a journey to aid another young man: Arthur Pendragon. He is a man who wants to replace barbarism with law, and keep those who work only for destruction at bay. He is seen, as the last great hope for all that is good. Clothar is drawn to this man, and together they build a dream too perfect to last--and, with a special woman, they share a love that will nearly destroy them all... The name of Clothar may be unknown to modern readers, for tales change in the telling through centuries. But any reader will surely know this heroic young man as well as they know the man who became his king. Hundreds of years later, chronicles call Clothar, the Lance Thrower, by a much more common name. That of Lancelot. |
From Quentin Tarantino (Kill Bill) to Eli Roth (Hostel), the young guns of modern Hollywood just can’t get enough of that exploitation film high. Between 1970 and 1985, American Exploitation movies went berserk. With censorship relaxed, excess, wide-open, horror – the Exploitation genre par excellence – offered a vibrant alternative to mainstream American cinema. Luridly titled wonders like The Headless Eyes, Scream Bloody Murder and Hitch Hike To Hell played at Texas drive-ins and NYC grindhouses, touting a combination of mind-bruising violence, weird sex and drug-soaked delirium. Massively popular around the world, these movies have remained persona non grata in most serious studies of American film, until now. • Explores the development of America’s subterranean horror film industry • Spotlights the wildest films • Revealing the fascinating true stories behind classics and obscurities |
The Knife Thrower introduces a series of distinctively Millhauserian worlds: tiny, fabulous, self-enclosed, like Fabergé eggs or like the short-story genre itself. Flying carpets; subterranean amusement parks; a band of teenage girls who meet secretly in the night in order to do "nothing at all"; a store with departments of Moorish courtyards, volcanoes, and Aztec temples: these are Millhauser's stock-in-trade as a storyteller, and he employs them to characteristically magical effect. As in Millhauser's other books, including Edwin Mullhouse and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Martin Dressler, his subject is nothing less than the faculty of imagination itself. Here, however, the flights of fancy are unencumbered by Martin Dressler's wealth of period detail, and the result is fun-house prose whose pleasures and terrors are equally gossamer. Millhauser possesses the unique ability to render the quotidian strange, so that, emerging from his stories, the reader often feels the world itself an unfamiliar place--as do the shoppers at his department store, that marketplace of skillful illusion: "As we hurry along the sidewalk, we have the absurd sensation that we have entered still another department, composed of ingeniously lifelike streets with artful shadows and reflections--that our destinations lie in a far corner of the same department--that we are condemned to hurry forever through these artificial halls, bright with late afternoon light, in search of the way out." |

