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Mirror Assembly Outer Rear View Left
JEEPMTR | 2024-07-21 05:25:31 |
These radios are amazing. Installed in my Jeep above my rear view mirror and I am stoked about it. It’s small enough to not be in the way but is great for communicating with fellow Jeep’s. I used the ghost antenna so that it didn’t get wiped out by limbs on the trail. I’m thinking of purchasing the 6db antenna to help increase my range. I feel you can’t go wrong with this radio! Will be purchasing another for my sons Jeep. 5 |
Jonathan | 0000-00-00 00:00:00 |
In the mid-1980s I bought a Nikon 7.5mm f5.6 circular fisheye. Being an older design (1966) its rear elements protruded into the mirror box. Fortunately my F3 had a hard physical mirror lockup. The external viewfinder for this lens attached to the camera on the original Nikon F/F2’s proprietary flash shoe. I was able to buy an AS-3 flash adapter for the F3. With the F3s mirror locked up I also had to use an hand-held light meter. With amazing depth of foield focusing was never an issue. The old zoom lens had six filters on a wheel. One was a skylight and the other five were strongly colored for B&W film. While I liked the circular results, using the lens was a hassle. I often had my shoes or forehead in the picture. On a sunny day, my images suffered from solar flares. My new Nikon 8-15mm AF-S fisheye has none of those old problems. It fits on my DSLRs without any problem. It doesn’t need an external finder or separate light meter. At the 8mm setting (and lens hood off) I get a circular image very much like the vintage fisheye. The new lens is faster and focusable. Like my 14mm f2.8 Nikkor, this zoom uses gel filters inserted in the rear of the lens. I really don’t like this arrangement. This fisheye is similar in weight and size to the 14mm lens. I am also not fond of the electronic aperture control first seen on G lenses. Without an aperture ring one cannot use this zoom on older cameras. At the longer end of the zoom range (12-15mm) the image fills the (FX) frame and lens hood stays out of the way. This image is similar to my inexpensive Bower (Samyang?) 8mm fisheye with its fixed lens hood (and DX coverage). So far I haven’t used my new lens much but I think I will like it. 5 |
Peter | 2024-04-15 05:34:26 |
This rack is exactly what I expected and what I needed. Easy to assemble and pretty well built. Not fancy, but looks good. I would not call this heavy duty by any stretch of the imagination, but it does seem robust enough for fairly heavy equipment (it seems a bit flimsy during the assembly process, but once it is all together it is pretty strong and rigid). This rack has usable rails on both the front and back -- excellent for a number of reasons such mounting heavy equipment with rear attachment points, mounting rear facing patch panels, or making the rack double-sided, provided the gear is not too deep and doesn't run too warm). I like the fact that the rack can be setup as metric or imperial threads (as others have noted, pay attention during assembly to ensure that you have the desired threads facing outward; it would be possible to have metric on the front, imperial on the rear (or vice versa), but this could be confusing). Includes a full set of screws for both the metric and imperial threads and the blank panel. 5 |
Kirk | 2024-09-12 05:46:57 |
I use this as a partial replacement for a mouse. I scroll with the outer ring, and have programmed the left and right buttons for Paste and Copy. The effect is to speed up operations, and to save my scrolling finger. On the right side, I have a Wacom pad for pointing, clicking and double-clicking. No more wrist pain! 5 |
Ron | 2024-04-15 02:30:21 |
I used the RAM Mount on my Vespa GTS250. It is attached to the left hand mirror stalk. It keeps my iPhone rock-steady. I use my iPhone as a speedometer, since the scooter's speedometer has such a large error. I works great. 5 |
Mabel | 2024-07-14 02:19:55 |
This works well as a head strap but it also works if you want to use it to wrap around something that may be easily scratched. This could mean the side view mirror of a car or maybe just to wrap around your pet. Over all, this product is one to have handy. 5 |
Ed Rose | 2024-05-18 06:57:26 |
This rear cam is small enough to not interfere with your view out your back window. The picture quality is great!!! 5 |
Joshua | 2024-05-23 06:45:10 |
I use these for construction and wow do they help. You can hear everything around you. You keep spatial awareness: left, right, front center rear below and above. These buds should be the standard for all hearing protection. Highly recommend. 5 |
Andrew | 2024-04-02 01:15:24 |
These are described as having center focus. The rear knob focuses both sides, and the front knob focuses the right side only. This is a HUGE, HUGE plus. Close your right eye, then focus the left with the rear knob. Next, close your left eye, and focus your right eye with the front knob. Then open both eyes !!! I agree with every other rave review. I wore them around my neck when cycling Le Camargue, and now when star hopping with my 8 scope. Watch out for binoculars on amazon with the same name. They lack the front knob. They're either an old model or are knock-offs. I trust B&H 100% 5 |
Filo | 2024-09-06 02:14:31 |
This is my second dash camera from Garmin. I use it for a rear view. The size is phenomenal. It doesn't attract attention. Very good software. Voice commands are very well designed and functional. It syncs with the front camera and works very well with the parking cable. The image quality is pretty good.. Higher resolution would require a lot more disk space. 5 |