Compare Prices for Green Star GS-1000 Juice Extractor

Green Star GS-1000 Juice ExtractorBuy Green Star GS-1000 Juice Extractor

Green Star GS-1000 Juice Extractor Product Description:



  • 110V Model
  • Automatic pulp ejection for continuous juicing and easier clean-up
  • Easily juices most fruits, herbs & vegetables and grinds nuts & grains
  • Works as a food mill for preparation of baby foods, sorbets and nut butters
  • Easy to clean and assemble
  • Portable with balanced ?sure grip? handle for easy carrying

Product Description

The only juicer you’ll ever need! For juicing fruits and vegetables of virtually every description, The Green Star Juice Extractor has no rival. From hard roots (carrots, ginger) to fibrous stalks (celery, rhubarb) to even the toughest leafy greens (kale, wheat grass), nothing is better at unleashing every drop of nutrition from fresh produce to boost your health, energy and overall sense of well-being. All models contain everything you’ll need for easy juicing and food processing. Green Star Juicers feature an exclusive low-speed, quiet and heavy-duty Twin-Gear impeller press system that operates with minimal noise, friction and heat, preserving even the most fragile nutrients. HD Twin-Gear juicing technology produces higher juice yield and enhances the nutritional value of every drop. UL, CE, and TUV certified with 5 year warranty. Set includes fine screen, glass juice pitcher, cleaning brush, plastic and wooden plungers.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

298 of 298 people found the following review helpful.
5The best juicer for green leafy veggies IF you don't mind assembly, disassembly & clean up.
By Groovy Vegan
I've been juicing since the early 1990s and more recently, as a certified raw foods associate chef, have been preparing a wider range of juicer recipes including pates and ice cream from frozen bananas. I have experience with Green Star, Champion, Juiceman, and several other juicers, and have read quite a bit about various models of juicers. If you are going to be juicing a lot of greens such as kale and parsley, the Green Star will give you a better and more nutritious yield than any juicer on the market. It far exceeds masticating juicers such as the Champion in this regard, as well as centrifugal juicers such as the Juiceman. A huge benefit of Green Star is that it juices wheat grass, so you will not need a dedicated wheat grass juicer. It's also amazingly quiet, far quieter (and a bit slower) than my Champion. And like the Champion, it does a great job with pates, frozen ice cream, and other recipes requiring a homogenizing blade, also known as a "blank." With a slower speed, the juice does not heat up as much as with a Champion and oxidizes slower.So is there a catch? Yes. There are far more parts to assemble, disassemble, and clean than with a Champion. I'm reminded of the time when my brother was a child, he asked to borrow my father's watch, and my father said, "sure." A few days later, my father wanted his watch back, and entered my brothers room to find a bazillion little pieces on the floor: gears, springs, etc. My brother explained that he wanted the watch so he could take it apart, but not to worry he said, "I'll put it back together." My father said, "don't worry about it, you can keep the watch." When I take apart a Green Star juicer, I always think of this story because it has so many more parts than a Champion. (Although fortunately, the Green Star is far easier to assemble and disassemble than an analog watch.:-) At the Living Light Culinary Institute where I trained as a raw foods chef, when we made pates and banana ice cream, we always reached for the Champion, not the Green Star.In deciding whether to purchase a Green Star juicer, consider whether you are going to be juicing a lot of greens and/or wheatgrass, and whether you're really going to take the time to disassemble, clean, and assemble about a dozen parts each time you use it. If you're not put off by that, then I highly recommend the Green Star. If you are mostly considering a juicer for carrot juice, fruit juices, banana ice cream and pates, then I would steer you towards the Champion. If you want to use a juicer for all of the above and can afford and have the space for both, then I enthusiastically recommend both.Note that there are 3 models of Green Star juicers, of which the GS1000 is their most basic model. The GreenStar.com website explains the various accessories that come with or can be purchased with each. Accessories such as pasta makers and mochi makers are available for purchase with the GS1000, but are included with the GS3000.

152 of 158 people found the following review helpful.
4excellent for my needs
By Lund Wolfe
I've been juicing for 20 years. My description of the Green Star 1000 is based on my experience with an old Champion, a new Champion, and an old Wheateena grass juicer. The Green Star spits pulp out the end so you can juice continuously just like the other juicers. The pulp discharged is always quite dry and completely shredded and it extracts a maximum amount of very high quality juice from everything it juices well. Exceptions are described below. It leaks a little juice into the pulp at the very start of juicing, like any juicer, which you can feed back through, of course. It has a nice glass pitcher. It didn't leak any juice onto the counter or spray carrot fiber out the discharge all over the counter like my Champion. It runs very quiet, unlike the Champion, and doesn't require any messy greasing before use like the other juicers. It has a convenient handle and storage compartment for the electrical cord. It never bogged down under load like my Champion does when juicing carrots. It has never gotten hot. Cold fruits and vegetables produced cool juice, unlike my other juicers. It is a refined juicer with a nice fit and finish. It has a five year warranty on the expensive motor and gears. It has a good reputation so I assume it will be very reliable like my Champion. They require the warranty to be received within 10 days of purchase, so if you purchase it online, you should use it and register it right away. You can register it online at their website.I almost exclusively juice only four things (carrots, red bell peppers, cucumbers, and lettuce), so I'll describe those that matter to me first.I get 2 1/4 cups of juice from 2 lbs of carrots, which is definitely better than my Champion. The juice is very high quality (as good as your carrots). The square chute is big enough for all but monster carrots. My only complaint is that carrots especially take a lot of downward force to push through the juicer. I don't really mind, but it could be a show stopper for some people. The off white plastic juicer parts stain very quickly from carrots, though this doesn't bother me. The Champion requires much less effort but doesn't extract as much juice. The Champion also is very noisy and leaks juice and sprays carrot fiber all over the counter. The Champion bogs down easily on carrots, but the commercial motor version probably fixes that problem.The Green Star also does an excellent job on bell peppers. It takes a fair amount of pressure to push them through, too, but I get 2 cups of juice from 1 1/2 lbs of peppers with very dry, shredded pulp discharged. There is a little pulp in the juice, but that's ok with me. The Champion is not very efficient and produces quite a bit of foam. My grass juicer doesn't extract as much juice as the Green Star.I juice lettuce because it is thirst quenching and is a nice milk substitute with meals and for taking vitamins. Lettuce is also somewhat hard to push through with the Green Star, but chopped chunks and leaves, that are awkward on the other juicers, feed through conveniently and without spilling into the juice pitcher and counter. It spits dry, shredded pulp out the discharge and puts very little foam in the juice. It is superior to my grass juicer and far superior to the Champion.The Green Star was extremely impressive on cucumbers. Both my Champion and grass juicer backup very quickly, becoming unusable, and spitting out very wet pulp. Cucumbers had to be quartered lengthwise like the other juicers but pushed through easily and juiced with very little foam and produced very dry, finely ground pulp out the discharge.The Green Star does an outstanding job on these juices which I make all the time, but I have found it to be significantly worse than my other juicers on other fruits and vegetables.It is usable for celery and juices it easily and doesn't wind the fibers around the cutter and clog up like my Champion, but it does produce some foam. I would use a dedicated grass/greens juicer for celery.It produces lots of foam and very little juice from spinach. I would stick with a dedicated grass juicer for spinach and other leafy greens. Wheatgrass would also probably juice very badly on the Green Star.It backed up, becoming unusable, after only a couple of oranges. The grass juicer was almost as bad. The Champion is excellent for citrus, especially if you like the rich, heavy Orange Julius type juice.Grapes backed up even worse than oranges. My grass juicer is very efficient with grapes, spitting fairly dry pulp out the discharge.The Green Star was usable for apples but is significantly worse than the Champion. The feed chutes is obviously small in the case of apples. Even medium size apples will have to be cut into six pieces. Foam isn't too bad if you juice very slowly and start juicing the apples before anything else, like carrots, that will start clogging the filter. There is lots of pulp in the juice (probably more than you want) and apples are hard to push through.For my juices the Green Star wins easily. It works equally well on hard carrots and soft cucumbers, bell peppers, and lettuce. I don't have to compromise juicing ability by using the wrong juicer for some juices or use and clean two juicers at the same time. The Green Star is easy to assemble, but it is a real chore to clean up all the parts, especially scrubbing the semi cylindrical filter screen inside and outside. I drink juices daily so I make all my juices about twice a week, which keep very well in the frig. The Champion is significantly better for most fruits and is much easier to clean. A grass juicer will be far better for spinach, other leafy greens, and grasses.Which juicer you choose will depend on which kinds of fruits and vegetables you will be juicing. You may have to buy more than one.

44 of 47 people found the following review helpful.
4Fabulous Juice--Hopefully Worth the Wait
By Tight with Yoda
Green Life juicers are about the only models recommended by my nutritionist. He shuns centrifugal juicers that use air in the extraction process, which he says leads to oxidation. Instead, the Green Star has a "close-case-crush-press" system, which crushes your food between two counter-rotating steel gears. You're left with juice that zings.But nice has a price. My biggest let-down with this juicer was finding out that it doesn't go through veggies as fast as my garbage disposal. At its fastest, the Green Star gives you a thin stream of juice that takes quite a while to fill the collection bowl.The other let-down in versatility. It does all right with flaccid, stringy, leafy foods like parsley and cilantro. But if there's any firmness to them--anything from cucumbers to celery to lemons--the juicer needs help. So before using the juicer I do a lot of pre-chopping.The clean-up is bearable. After making juice, there are about seven parts that disassemble easily. You don't need to reach into crevices in the main unit. All the parts clean easily but one small screen, which needs some serious scrubbing. The specialty brush supplied with the juicer helps out.Although this is my first juicer, I'm sure there are faster models out there. But I'm health-conscious too, and the twin gear system seems to leave a small "oxygen footprint." Plus my body craves the juice!

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Discount Tribest Personal Blender, Compact Package (PB-100)

Tribest Personal Blender, Compact Package (PB-100)Buy Tribest Personal Blender, Compact Package (PB-100)

Tribest Personal Blender, Compact Package (PB-100) Product Description:



  • Compact blender set, with 2 large blend-n-serve cups and lids
  • Blending/grinding blades are completely enclosed during operation, making it impossible to come in contact with spinning blades
  • The powerful 200 watt motor easily blends all your favorite ingredients, including ice, and grinds all your grains, nuts, and seeds
  • 2 modes of operation: One touch pulse and press and twist continuous modes for blending and grinding to that perfect consistency
  • The polycarbonate blend-n-serve cups are virtually unbreakable, they?re made from the same material that?s used in bullet-proof glass

Product Description

Make it your own way in your own cup and drink up! Versatile and portable for today’s busy lifestyle, Tribest’s Personal Blender® allows individuals and families to blend multiple drinks without having to stop and clean a bulky blending jar for each recipe. Blend and serve your own individual drink right in your own individual Blend-N-Serve cup, or take it to go with the secure and convenient lid. There’s no extra mess to clean up and everyone gets just what they want. In under a minute, life just got a whole lot tastier! The high-powered, smoothie-blending, coffee-grinding, sauce-making wonder with Blend-N-Serve cups for the convenience.

Customer Reviews

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122 of 124 people found the following review helpful.
4Don't ignore the fine print
By Mark Taylor
This blender looks pretty nice, it is small, and it requires less cleaning than traditional blenders. It is also higher quality than other one cup blenders. That aside... the instructions say that you cannot put the cups into the dishwasher so you must wash by hand. The cups also have measurement marks on the side, but they are very hard to read. One cup was washed by mistake and the plastic became fuzzy.The blender will chop full sized iced cubes, but not well, it leaves big chunks. If you crush the ice first with your fridge dispenser or with another machine, then this blender does a much better job. Tribest does sell an ice crusher attachment but not with the package I bought.With thicker shakes content can get stuck up at the bottom of the cup. Do not shake the blender to move the stuck content down towards the blades while the machine is running, this will make the motor smell like burning rubber. Take the cup off, shake it, then put it back on the motor. Also place ice, hard stuff toward the top, close to the blades, and protein powder right at the top, the first thing to touch the blades. These tidbits are not in the instructions but are necessary to avoid excessive shaking and scraping protein powder off the side of the cup later.The instructions also say not to run the unit for more than 60 seconds at a time with 45 seconds in between. This is probably because there is only a 200 watt motor in the thing. The problem is that 60 seconds is not enough time to blend most smoothies that have ice.Don't get me wrong, I have used this blender everyday for ten weeks and it is still much better than a larger blender, easier to clean, less noisy, and smaller.Oh, and the biggest benefit. Since the container is small, 16 oz there is not a lot of air that gets incorporated into the drink. In a normal sized blender the contents expand when making one drink and all that air can make you feel bloated. With this blender there is less air that can be whipped up into your single serving smoothie.

78 of 79 people found the following review helpful.
5Don't believe anything bad about this product!
By JJ
This is the best, most beloved item in my kitchen!!!I only wish I had bought the grinder and all the different cups (which I am going to now add on).I read some of the other reviews---and at first I was also disappointed with this blender. Now that I have learned how to use it, I LOVE IT!!!DO NOT put Protein powder into it first, it will get stuck in the bottom of the cup which you invert onto the blades (When you invert it, the bottom becomes the top). If you put liquid in first and then the powder there's no problem. You have to learn how to use it. You will want to put the frozen fruit in last if you are making something really thick.I read the reviews here before I bought mine and a woman said hers was junk but I went ahead and read the rest of the reviews and decided to buy it. If mine breaks in a year, it will have been well worth the price. I use it every day and sometimes three times a day. On a hot day when I want something slushy and cold, I'll put in orange juice with some strawberries and ice---in a flash you have a refreshing drink. It's fabulous.I could use my Cuisinart, but this blender is so easy and quiet by comparison. There are no buttons to push, you just fill the cup with your juice (I often add protein powder) and something frozen (Ice or frozen fruit) and screw on the lid (which have blades in it) and put it on the blending base and twist. You can either twist and pusle it, or twist and leave it to blend on its own. Then you take the lid off, rinse, and that's it.I love hummus and I will never make it in the blender because you have to dig it out and most of it gets left behind. With this gadget, you fill the cup, blend it, then screw off the blade lid, screw on the refrigerator lid, and that's it. Nothing to scrape, just put it in the refrigerator. (Oh yes, you do have to rinse off the blade lid, that's the whole clean-up).If you like frozen drinks or sauces you blend, this is a great gadget!!! I live in two places and I am getting another one for the other place, but I'm buying the complete set this time.

54 of 55 people found the following review helpful.
1Just Not Durable
By Girevik
All of the 5-Star reviews are spot on regarding the convenience and effectiveness of the Tribest Blender. It is a great product except for the fact that it simply isn't nearly durable enough to warrant the investment. When my first unit broke in less than 3 months I was happy to assume that either I or one of my kids had done something wrong and immediately ordered another. Now that that unit has also broken in less than three months I'm convinced its just a poorly constructed product. In both instances the plastic disk on the bass unit that spins the blender simply broke. I remember enough of my high school physics to understand torque but these units were never challenged to do more than blend a half cup of frozen berries with juice and protein powder. And probably not more than a half dozen times a week.I've become a huge fan of the single serve blender and replaced the last one with the competitive blender with hopes that I will get more than 3 months life out of the product. If you buy the Tribest, DON"T THROW AWAY THE WARRANTY!

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Discount J.K. Adams 39-Inch-by-13-Inch Hardwood Ceiling Pot Rack, 8-Pot Hooks and 4-Utensil Hooks Included, Natural

J.K. Adams 39-Inch-by-13-Inch Hardwood Ceiling Pot Rack, 8-Pot Hooks and 4-Utensil Hooks Included, NaturalBuy J.K. Adams 39-Inch-by-13-Inch Hardwood Ceiling Pot Rack, 8-Pot Hooks and 4-Utensil Hooks Included, Natural

J.K. Adams 39-Inch-by-13-Inch Hardwood Ceiling Pot Rack, 8-Pot Hooks and 4-Utensil Hooks Included, Natural Product Description:



  • 39-Inch-by-13-Inch-by-12-Inch ceiling pot rack
  • Hardwood with a natural finish; hardware included; 8 pot hooks and 4 utensil hooks
  • Handcrafted and finished in Vermont, U.S.A.
  • Hand wash with warm soapy water and dry promptly
  • Manufacturer's 5-year warranty

Product Description

J.K. Adams: A 2nd-Generation, Family-Owned Company

Kitchen storage solutions by J.K. Adams make it easy to save on valuable kitchen space while enjoying the best of USA-made craftsmanship. The family-owned company provides everything from pot hooks and spice bottles to wooden spice carousels, kitchen-knife blocks, bread boxes, wine racks, pot racks, and more. J.K. Adams' wooden kitchen items feature renewable and sustainable wood in Maple, Cherry, Walnut, Alder, Ash, or Hickory varieties, and many of the items are FSC certified. A thoughtful choice for gift giving, the high-quality kitchen items provide sleek designs and convenient functionality for year after year of everyday convenience.

Innovative Kitchen-Storage Solutions

In the late-1970's, when the gourmet-chef-tools market in the U.S. was still in its infancy, J.K. Adams owner Malcolm Cooper, Sr. conceived of the first slanted knife block. His goal was to create a cutlery organizer that would hold knives at a low enough angle that they could be easily removed from the block when it was pushed back under a cabinet overhang. The J.K. Adams Kangaroo knife block was launched in 1980--the first-ever slanted knife block, and still the best.

Recognizing the many opportunities to improve kitchen storage, J.K. Adams introduced the revolving "carousel" spice rack in 1982 followed by countless other well-designed storage products in the years since, including the popular in-drawer knife tray in 1994, a space-saving alternative to the knife block that offers the same safety and blade protection.

In 2011, J.K. Adams takes cutlery storage to a new level once again with the new Universal knife block. For over 30 years, J.K. Adams has continued to lead and inspire the kitchen storage market with their innovative designs, superior hardwoods, and exemplary craftsmanship.

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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful.
4Nice Rack, Installation might be a small challenge in some kitchens
By rwizard
I initially purchased the smaller sibling of this rack J.K. Adams PRC-24 Mini Ceiling Oval Pot Rack, Natural but found it a bit too small for my needs. The larger model turned out to be more suited to the quantity of cookware I had accumulated over the years.The mounting points for this rack are on 11-1/4" by 32" centers. For those of you who will be mounting the rack across your joists, this should make installation fairly straightforward, easy, and quick, assuming your joists are on standard 16" centers. If, like me, you are mounting the rack running with your joists, things get more challenging. And, when you are also mounting the rack over a counter whose relationship with the joists can only be described as "unfortunate", it gets slightly more complicated.I solved my problem with two 34" long 3.5" wide oak planks, fastened into three joists, using 3" #12 brass wood screws, countersunk into the oak. The three joists were made necessary because of the relationship of the rack to the counter, and the fact that it was important to keep the rack mounting points between joist attachments to prevent the weight on the rack from being out on a "lever" with the last attachment point acting as a fulcrum. Without the need to line up favorably with the counter, a pair of 18" boards, attached at two joists would have been just fine. I mounted the rack offset, 4" from the back of the counter. I chose this offset to keep the pans out of my face when working at the counter, as I need all available workspace in my galley style kitchen.Working on the ceiling is always a treat. I transferred the exact location of the back edge of my counter to the ceiling by clamping a board along the counter's curved edge, and using it as a reference rail. The actual transfer was done using a Bosch plumb laser Bosch Self-Leveling Laser Plumb Bob (GPL2) . To find the joists I used Zircon 60276 MultiScanner i700 OneStep Wood, Metal, and Live Wire Stud Sensor, however, there were some "mystery boards" in my ceiling that cast some doubt as to whether I was correctly identifying the joists, and I finally had to resort to using a fiber optic camera Ridgid 31123 SeeSnake Micro 9.5mm Inspection Camera to identify what was what. The "mystery boards" run back among some cabinets, and I'm still not sure why they were put there, but at least I was able to properly identify the joists. For placement of the first plank, measurements were made to a nearby wall, and the second plank was placed by measurements to the first, along with the use of the stud-finder and a square. I fabricated a small drilling template from some scrap aluminum I had on hand to insure consistent hole placement across both planks. Other tools used included a Makita circular saw Makita 5008MGA Magnesium 8-1/4-Inch Circular Saw , Skil 3400-12 10-Inch Table Saw Kit with Stand (both equipped with a Freud "fine" blade Freud TF1061 10-Inch 60-Tooth Thin Kerf Fine Cut Blade) and a Milwaukee Drill Milwaukee 2601-22 18-Volt Li-ion Compact Drill Kit . Also used were misc. drill bits, including a #12 countersink; a screwdriver, screwdriver bit, a 24" square, a 36" "story stick", a 36" steel rule, (2) 12" "rapid clamps" and an ancient Porter Cable router.Once everything had been mounted to the ceiling and I had a good "test fit" trial with the rack in place, I pulled it all back down. I then "dressed up" the oak planks a bit using a router. Finally, I sanded and finished them, using a natural finish Minwax Natural Finish, 1 Qt. Once dry, it all went back up. While not an exact match, by any means, the naturally finished oak blends well with the wood and metal of the rack. The woods I found at my local "big box DIY" which might have been a closer match to the wood in the rack, did not offer the strength of the oak, and I find I like the resulting aesthetic, right down to the accent of the brass screw heads.Although the particulars of my situation made this into a bigger installation task than I anticipated, that will certainly not be the case for everyone. I do wish J. K. Adams would wise up and offer both an 18" and 34" adapter board set - we aren't all going to be mounting across the joists. And please, no matter how tempted you may be to cheat, make the effort (or hire the effort) to be sure this thing is solidly fastened to your joists. Do not let anyone convince you that some gadget will let you use the sheet-rock. That patented miracle-anchor may let you attach a Volkswagen to your sheet-rock wall without a problem, but this is a ceiling, not a wall. Not only do you need to avoid the sickening sound of a hole being torn in your ceiling, and your expensive cookware crashing down on whatever is below, but you also need to consider the real risk of someone being injured. I have no doubt my Le Creuset Dutch Oven could seriously injure, perhaps even kill, when falling from a height. Especially if it squarely struck a small child on the head.Overall, I would strongly recommend this rack. I have ordered more hooks for mine, and look forward to years of having my cookware properly stored, a nice contrast to the years of cursing and swearing, digging around in dark cabinets while crouched on the floor with a flashlight.So, enjoy your new rack if you buy one, and Bon Appétit !

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
5Very functional and high quality
By ROB
This is a great pot rack that I will take with me if I ever move. The combo of metal and wood is done well an adds to the functionality. The wood rails allow for the hooks to slide to the desired spot with no weight on them. This allows for adjustment every time you hang a pot or pan if you wish to keep them from hitting each other. The rack hangs by 8 inch hooks and you can add additional 8 or 4 inch to achieve your desired height. The look is cleaner than a chain. The rack is made to come apart if you wish to refinish or paint the wood to another color. I like the natural lighter wood it came with myself. You won't be disappointed with this rack.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Works wonderfully!
By Parker Dahl
we are loving this product! we have a small kitchen and it has really cleared up a lot of space. Although it says it is only 11 inches wide, we were able to fit it between 16 inch studs without additional pieces of equipment, and it really doesn't look like it's going to cause any problems. It sits evenly between them, and doesn't seem to be having any troubles with bending or anything (fingers crossed).

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For Sale Online 2 Story Fire Escape Ladder, Holds Up To 600 Pounds (White) (12.5' L x 14" W x 9" D)

Buy 2 Story Fire Escape Ladder, Holds Up To 600 Pounds (White) (12.5' L x 14" W x 9" D)

2 Story Fire Escape Ladder, Holds Up To 600 Pounds (White) (12.5' L x 14" W x 9" D) Product Description:



  • Color: White
  • Size: 12.5' L x 14" W x 9" D
  • Firefighter designed. Can hold 600 lbs, and fits up to a 9" windowsill. Guaranteed not to tangle.
  • Stantions hold the ladder away from the side of the home and provide rigid stability.

Product Description

Be prepared for emergencies! Designed by a firefighter to ensure safe exit in the event of a fire or other emergency, this fire escape ladder is a life-saving necessity for anyone who lives in a multi-story home. Easy to use - simply fit the metal hooks over a windowsill and pull the quick-release velcro strap to unfold the ladder down the side of a house or apartment building. Unlike other escape ladders on the market, this well-designed fire ladder is guaranteed not to tangle. When you step onto the ladder rungs, the stanchions hold the ladder away from the side of the building and provide rigid stability for safety and ease of use. Sturdy, yet lightweight enough for a small child to use. Stores easily in a closet or under a bed for quick access. This sturdy safety ladder can hold up to 600 lbs, and fits up to a 9-inch windowsill. Weighs approximately 10 pounds. Folds down to less than 12" high. Two-story fire ladder dimensions: 12.5-ft L x 14" W x 9" D. .

Customer Reviews

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
12 Story Fire Escape Ladder
By Bob
I have two older fire excape ladders from the Dial company that I'm pleased with. The Dial ladder I purchased from the Stacks and Stacks company did not have the Dial name printed on it like my two others have and the red band is smaller and doesn't hold the ladder together well, it wants to flop out of the nylon red band (not good for an emergency situtation). And the PVC tubes that should lock in place to keep the ladder straight don't. When I asked to return the item it took several days to get the manager to call me back and I was told I would be charged the return shipping. I won't buy another one from this company.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5I hope I never have to use it, but I trust it
By Kyllein MacKellerann
It arrived nicely boxed. When I opened it, I found a strong, mostly plastic ladder with large hooks for windowsills. There are standoffs on the rungs so your feet will find rung, not wall. The rungs come in pairs and are securely fastened to a very heavy poly rope. It is lightweight itself but can hold a lot of weight so no problems using it. The window hooks are aluminum, so no heat worries.It is solid. Solid enough to trust climbing out a second story window over nothing but concrete.Like I said: I hope I never have to use it, but if I do, I know I can trust it to get me safely on the ground, un-hurt.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
1not safe
By X-it Products Aldo Dibelardino
i bought this ladder in 1996. it did not fit our windows - we had brick exterior. while trying it out the first step broke. this experience helped create the award winning x-it ladder. since then reputable safety companies have stopped manufacturing this design.

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Cheapest Tush Cushion (Navy) (14" x 18")

Buy Tush Cushion (Navy) (14" x 18")

Tush Cushion (Navy) (14" x 18") Product Description:



  • Navy Large Tush Cush

Product Description

Navy Large Tush Cush

Customer Reviews

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Comfort
By kelpick
This cushion is incredibly comfortable and has helped my sciatic problems immensely! I use it in my office chair and in my truck.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Just what the back needed!
By Shirley R. Berry
I have two herniated back discs, so I bought one of these cushions for my home computer chair for some temporary relief. The cushion works so well, I sometimes take it over to the couch and watch T.V., etc. as well.I am now going to order a 2nd cushion for my work chair, to replace the flemsy 1st lamb's covered cushion that I bought. This tush-cush is very durable and offers the proper tail-bone relief that I need...Highly recommend it!

0 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
4Cushion
By J. Traverso
Cushion is okay, but not quite what I needed at the time as I was in severe back pain. However, since I am better the cushion works well for me.

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Cheap Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Nikon Mount Lenses (Model 300FNS)

Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Nikon Mount Lenses (Model 300FNS)Buy Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Nikon Mount Lenses (Model 300FNS)

Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Nikon Mount Lenses (Model 300FNS) Product Description:



  • Increases focal length from same camera position by 2x
  • Superior performance for unsurpassed image quality and ease of use
  • Fits easily between lens and camera body
  • Includes carry case
  • For use with Nikon Digital SLR cameras

Product Description

A Teleconverter is a great way to extend the focal length of your lens. This Teleconverter will extend the focal length of your lens by 2x giving more magnification. The Tamron Pro series Teleconverter offer superior optical construction for improved image quality.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

81 of 83 people found the following review helpful.
5Tamron vs Canon SP Autofocus 2x Pro
By Howard Lower
I am a professional that uses Canon L lens only and was using Canon Teleconverters both 14x and 2x that I use extensively without a Problem. But, I have decided to go with the Tamron SP Autofocus 2x & 14x Pros.Why? I have done extensive testing on the four teleconverters and have found that there is no noticeable difference beween like teleconverter. The only exception is the Canon's are heavier and longer and protrude into the lens but are not any better than Tamrons. Another professional friend of mine also looked at the results and was equally surpised.Tamron's will work on more lens as they do not protrude into the lens like the Canon's do. Remember that lens will only auto focus if you are f8 or less (bigger)lens f-stop. If you add a 2x to an f4 lens it will not autofocus. I manually focus when I have a long telephoto lens on to get out to 800mm but this means with my f4 lens it is really now f8 so requires manual focus. Tamron has a very good little manual that explains all of this. Good luck, Howard

38 of 38 people found the following review helpful.
5Excellent accessory
By Michael Gordon
A teleconverter is basically just a high quality concave lens that spreads the image wider, the sensor thus sees the center of this spreading. It is sort of like cropping and enlarging right in the camera. The result, in this case, is a doubling of the effective focal length -- a 200mm lens becomes a 400mm lens -- but you also lose 2 f-stops of light. F2.8 becomes f5.6.I purchased this Tamron 2x teleconverter to augment Tamron's 70-200mm f2.8 telephoto zoom (hereafter called T70) on a Nikon D700 body. The combination then becomes a 140-400 f5.6 lens. The T70 and this converter cost together around a thousand dollars; but the Nikkor 200-400 f4 (the next thing better) is $6,000 and you get only one f-stop more light at six times the cost.The good news is that it works.I've tried three lenses on it so far. (1) The T70; (2) a Nikkor 28-300mm VR; (3) and a cheap 500mm "long lens". All three work well. There's not really much point in using a superzoomThe teleconverter includes a screw-focusing passthrough for your old lenses that are focused by a motor in the camera body, aperture stopdown ring and CPU coupling contacts. As always, make sure you have turned off your camera before adding or removing these things. If you do it anyway, you can remove the camera battery for a minute or so and that might reset everything. It did for me anyway.Picture quality is better than expected, I would say excellent. No discernable chromatic abberation even at 200x previewing in Photoshop. Just a hint of spherical abberation. It doubles any defects in the lens attached to it so start with a good lens.Autofocus -- In theory, yes, in practice it depends on the lens you use it with. The T70 already "hunts" a bit too much and the teleconverter merely increases its tendency to "overshoot". The 28-300 didn't autofocus worth a hoot but at f5.6 to start with, f11 effectively when doubled, that's not to wonder. Just put it in manual.The front lens element mount is recessed 7/16 inch, or 11 millimeters, below the lens attachment mounting plate. Your lenses that project more than this beyond the mounting plate won't fit.It is solidly constructed but relatively lightweight.Altogether I am very pleased with it.

36 of 39 people found the following review helpful.
4Double your focal length
By Technology Guy
I realize now that I probably would have been fine with the non-PRO version of the teleconverter -- I'm not certain whether the differences between the PRO and standard actually justify the extra cost (unless you use Canon L lenses perhaps). But that is neither here nor there.The Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter doubles your lens' focal length and adds two f-stops (meaning you'll be getting 1/4 the light with the teleconverter). This is the same for all 2X teleconverters. The addition 2 f-stops will make it difficult to use autofocus unless you have a fast lens and lots of light to work with. You'll also want to use the teleconverter with a long telephoto lens.The Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter works as advertised with 35mm and digital cameras. I've had no problems using a Tamron 70-300mm lens with this teleconverter on a Rebel XT aside from the expected auto-focus issues. There are a few issues I noticed though beyond the typical problems found with any 2X teleconverter:(1) The teleconverter causes autofocus to misbehave with some lenses. The only lens I've ever had this happen with is a Sigma High Speed 28-70mm f2.8-4 zoom. It wasn't just that the autofocus couldn't achieve a lock but seemed to be more of an incompatibility issue with the lens focusing in and out nonstop.(2) The Canon Rebel XT kit lens - and probably all EF-S lenses - will not phyically FIT into this teleconverter. The EOS digital-only EF-S mount lenses won't physically fit in standard 35mm cameras either so this isn't a total surprise.(3) Using this teleconverter with a non-auto-focus manual-only lens (or a telescope) will stop the shutter release button from functioning. I understand this is a fairly common problem with teleconverters. The solution is, when attaching the teleconverter to the camera, to avoid rotating the teleconverter completely so that it does not lock in place. This ensures that the camera and teleconverter electrical contacts are not engaged.I find the Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter quite useful though perhaps a bit overpriced for those of us without premium lenses.

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Buy Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Nikon Mount Lenses (Model 300FNS)

Discount Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Canon Mount Lenses (Model 300FCA)

Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Canon Mount Lenses (Model 300FCA)Buy Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Canon Mount Lenses (Model 300FCA)

Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Canon Mount Lenses (Model 300FCA) Product Description:



  • Increases focal length from same camera position by 2x
  • Superior performance for unsurpassed image quality and ease of use
  • Fits easily between lens and camera body
  • Includes carry case
  • For use with Canon SLR cameras

Product Description

A Teleconverter is a great way to extend the focal length of your lens. This Teleconverter will extend the focal length of your lens by 2x giving more magnification. The Tamron Pro series Teleconverter offer superior optical construction for improved image quality.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

81 of 83 people found the following review helpful.
5Tamron vs Canon SP Autofocus 2x Pro
By Howard Lower
I am a professional that uses Canon L lens only and was using Canon Teleconverters both 14x and 2x that I use extensively without a Problem. But, I have decided to go with the Tamron SP Autofocus 2x & 14x Pros.Why? I have done extensive testing on the four teleconverters and have found that there is no noticeable difference beween like teleconverter. The only exception is the Canon's are heavier and longer and protrude into the lens but are not any better than Tamrons. Another professional friend of mine also looked at the results and was equally surpised.Tamron's will work on more lens as they do not protrude into the lens like the Canon's do. Remember that lens will only auto focus if you are f8 or less (bigger)lens f-stop. If you add a 2x to an f4 lens it will not autofocus. I manually focus when I have a long telephoto lens on to get out to 800mm but this means with my f4 lens it is really now f8 so requires manual focus. Tamron has a very good little manual that explains all of this. Good luck, Howard

38 of 38 people found the following review helpful.
5Excellent accessory
By Michael Gordon
A teleconverter is basically just a high quality concave lens that spreads the image wider, the sensor thus sees the center of this spreading. It is sort of like cropping and enlarging right in the camera. The result, in this case, is a doubling of the effective focal length -- a 200mm lens becomes a 400mm lens -- but you also lose 2 f-stops of light. F2.8 becomes f5.6.I purchased this Tamron 2x teleconverter to augment Tamron's 70-200mm f2.8 telephoto zoom (hereafter called T70) on a Nikon D700 body. The combination then becomes a 140-400 f5.6 lens. The T70 and this converter cost together around a thousand dollars; but the Nikkor 200-400 f4 (the next thing better) is $6,000 and you get only one f-stop more light at six times the cost.The good news is that it works.I've tried three lenses on it so far. (1) The T70; (2) a Nikkor 28-300mm VR; (3) and a cheap 500mm "long lens". All three work well. There's not really much point in using a superzoomThe teleconverter includes a screw-focusing passthrough for your old lenses that are focused by a motor in the camera body, aperture stopdown ring and CPU coupling contacts. As always, make sure you have turned off your camera before adding or removing these things. If you do it anyway, you can remove the camera battery for a minute or so and that might reset everything. It did for me anyway.Picture quality is better than expected, I would say excellent. No discernable chromatic abberation even at 200x previewing in Photoshop. Just a hint of spherical abberation. It doubles any defects in the lens attached to it so start with a good lens.Autofocus -- In theory, yes, in practice it depends on the lens you use it with. The T70 already "hunts" a bit too much and the teleconverter merely increases its tendency to "overshoot". The 28-300 didn't autofocus worth a hoot but at f5.6 to start with, f11 effectively when doubled, that's not to wonder. Just put it in manual.The front lens element mount is recessed 7/16 inch, or 11 millimeters, below the lens attachment mounting plate. Your lenses that project more than this beyond the mounting plate won't fit.It is solidly constructed but relatively lightweight.Altogether I am very pleased with it.

36 of 39 people found the following review helpful.
4Double your focal length
By Technology Guy
I realize now that I probably would have been fine with the non-PRO version of the teleconverter -- I'm not certain whether the differences between the PRO and standard actually justify the extra cost (unless you use Canon L lenses perhaps). But that is neither here nor there.The Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter doubles your lens' focal length and adds two f-stops (meaning you'll be getting 1/4 the light with the teleconverter). This is the same for all 2X teleconverters. The addition 2 f-stops will make it difficult to use autofocus unless you have a fast lens and lots of light to work with. You'll also want to use the teleconverter with a long telephoto lens.The Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter works as advertised with 35mm and digital cameras. I've had no problems using a Tamron 70-300mm lens with this teleconverter on a Rebel XT aside from the expected auto-focus issues. There are a few issues I noticed though beyond the typical problems found with any 2X teleconverter:(1) The teleconverter causes autofocus to misbehave with some lenses. The only lens I've ever had this happen with is a Sigma High Speed 28-70mm f2.8-4 zoom. It wasn't just that the autofocus couldn't achieve a lock but seemed to be more of an incompatibility issue with the lens focusing in and out nonstop.(2) The Canon Rebel XT kit lens - and probably all EF-S lenses - will not phyically FIT into this teleconverter. The EOS digital-only EF-S mount lenses won't physically fit in standard 35mm cameras either so this isn't a total surprise.(3) Using this teleconverter with a non-auto-focus manual-only lens (or a telescope) will stop the shutter release button from functioning. I understand this is a fairly common problem with teleconverters. The solution is, when attaching the teleconverter to the camera, to avoid rotating the teleconverter completely so that it does not lock in place. This ensures that the camera and teleconverter electrical contacts are not engaged.I find the Tamron SP Autofocus 2x Pro Teleconverter quite useful though perhaps a bit overpriced for those of us without premium lenses.

See all 31 customer reviews...


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More Info: See on Amazon.com!
See Customers Review: See on Amazon.com!

Buy Tamron SP AF 2x Pro Teleconverter for Canon Mount Lenses (Model 300FCA)