(Part 3) Top products from r/boulder

Jump to the top 20

We found 16 product mentions on r/boulder. We ranked the 55 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

Next page

Top comments that mention products on r/boulder:

u/shibbolething · 1 pointr/boulder

Thanks, I'll read the book mentioned in the article. A good starter/companion reader for those interested in water history out here is Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water. It's older, but it's been revised over the years and is a great place to start.

https://www.amazon.com/Cadillac-Desert-American-Disappearing-Revised/dp/0140178244

u/rylanb · 2 pointsr/boulder

I don't know offhand where to get milk crates. Behind grocery stores, I guess. Been a long time since I needed 'em. But they are handy for storing all my vinyl. Absolut Vinyl sells white finished wood boxes for $18 - $20 that you can stack up, I think. You could also get a rolling metal cart kinda like this: http://www.amazon.com/Whitmor-6056-344-N-Supreme-Cart-Chrome/dp/B000063SI0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1343747792&sr=8-1&keywords=metal+cart. I had a friend use that with plywood on the shelves to prevent them from slipping through. Side benefit, you can roll 'em around!

What kinda music do you collect on vinyl?

u/__PROMETHEUS__ · 3 pointsr/boulder

Knife sharpening is incredibly easy, there is no reason to pay someone to do it unless you've got a damaged blade. Plus it's going to get dull again with use, so why not do it yourself?

A few options:

Inexpensive, great reviews($5): KitchenIQ

Mid grade, I love this one ($37): Chef's Choice Diamond

Not cheap, does serrated as well ($150): Chef's Choice Trizor

You can go the manual route and get wet stones, but that's a bit more time consuming and not really needed unless you've got some nice blades.

u/tmtreat · 1 pointr/boulder

I didn't know the trick about sitting on the bulge for even inflation. Cool!

Here's the one I got a couple years ago which I absolutely love.

u/karldafog · 2 pointsr/boulder

Thanks for the tip. I originally reached out to the person who created the table. She recommended sanding it and then reapplying this varnish which she originally put on the table ~5yrs ago. Unfortunately, she lives in Oakland or I'd ask her to help out!

https://www.amazon.com/Modern-Masters-DP609-32-Varnish-32-Ounce/dp/B000Z4DYQ8

u/BendyMouse · 2 pointsr/boulder

My experience is the problem does get somewhat better as more and more people chicken out as the weather dips toward and below freezing. Go away unprepared people!

My light is a sigma karma evo. (http://www.amazon.com/Sigma-Karma-Rechargeable-Light-Lumen/dp/B004MA24OY#) It's 320 lumen, but the middle setting is often more than adequate for the 100% unlit parts of the path. Unlit cyclists still aren't visible soon enough, but I don't think a better light would help. For an analogy, car headlights are brighter than 1400 lumen and throw light much further (I assume!), but without lights or reflectors, driver can barely see cyclists too! So that's the lightless cyclist's fault, not my light's!

u/quotesDante · 1 pointr/boulder

I use the Big Berkey with charcoal filters. My main concern was lead. However, it may not help with the situation described in the letter. I at least hope it does remove nearly all heavy metals, though.

u/blackbeard8 · 3 pointsr/boulder

They make citronella based products, generally referred to as "shield sprays." Definitely not as intense as pepper spry but allegedly gets the job done.

http://www.amazon.com/SprayShield-Animal-Deterrent-Spray-Belt/dp/B0002XKIV6

u/KnifeTotingFerret · 3 pointsr/boulder

you talking this? https://www.amazon.com/pin-fan-adapter-cable/dp/B002PNL3IS just plug it in, the 3rd wire is for tachometer, you don't need it.

u/GOTO_Velociraptor · 1 pointr/boulder

It was basically one of these with a simple padlock locking it together.

I don't know if they cut the cable or smashed the lock, there wasn't any debris left to tell how they got through it.