Hot sale reasonable price 14″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish in Macedonia

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Heavy duty rubber glove, made of 100% natural latex. 14″ length(36cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 330g/pair, 100pairs/case. Water proof, anti acid and alkali. Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.


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Our eternal pursuits are the attitude of "regard the market, regard the custom, regard the science" and the theory of "quality the basic, trust the first and management the advanced". Hot sale reasonable price 14″ rubber glove with cotton linning-rough finish in Macedonia, We sincerely welcome domestic and foreign merchants who calls, letters asking, or to plants to negotiate, we will offer you quality products and the most enthusiastic service,We look forward to your visit and your cooperation


Heavy duty rubber glove, made of 100% natural latex.

14″ length(36cm), rough finish, seamless, cotton lining, left/right hand, 330g/pair, 100pairs/case.

Water proof, anti acid and alkali. Using for Isolater, dry box, blast cabinet, glove box, etc.

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  • A dog who is allergic to grass has been given a new leash of life thanks to specially made boots.

    The 11-year-old Hungarian Vizsla comes out in painful lumps on her paws if she comes into contact with grass because the pads on her feet are so worn down and sensitive.

    Her owner, Vicki Painter, 39, from Warfield, Berks, has spent more than £10,000 over the years on medication and special allergy food to combat her allergies without success.

    But Millie can now enjoy walkies pain free after being kitted out in a set of ‘doggy boots’ to protect her poor paws.

    Vicki, an IT project manager, said: “The shoes have made a huge difference. She absolutely loves them.

    “The allergies were all year round. As well as giving her serious eye and ear infections she’d get these horrible lumps between her toes that would open and bleed.

    “The pads under her feet have virtually worn away from the years of pollen and grass allergies.

    “We had to carry a 30kg dog out of the house because her feet were too tender to walk on the gravel driveway but now she can run around with our other dogs.

    “Her quality of life has changed so much.”

    Vicki and her husband Glyn, 40, bought Millie from a breeder when she was a nine-week-old puppy but it wasn’t until she was two that they noticed something was wrong.

    They took her to their local vets, where tests revealed she suffered from a range of allergies, not just grass.

    Her intolerances include, wheat, soya, rice, gluten and she also reacts badly when she comes into contact with cats, dust mites and pollen.

    Vicki said: “She was our first dog together. We’d only been married a few years before. Our families had had dogs but they’d always been healthy.

    “I’d never heard of a dog with a grass allergy. I didn’t think it was possible.

    “Our cat Tinkerbell now lives with my parents so that Millie doesn’t have to come into contact with her fur every day.”

    The vet tried a range of things and when he ran out of options, he referred Millie to a professor of dermatology at Queen Mother Animal Hospital in North Mymms, Hertfordshire.

    She was put on a course of steroids, antihistamines and a variety of special allergy free diet.

    Vicki said: “Over the years we’ve spent thousands of pounds.

    “If you think there is something that can help and cure them you couldn’t live with yourself if you didn’t do it. We would have tried anything.

    “The steroid tablets made her incontinent and the antihistamines made her drowsy. She was miserable, lethargic and not herself.

    “We couldn’t avoid grass. It was impossible. So we had to bath her with special medicated shampoo after every walk.

    “She was constantly licking her paws where she was sore. She was miserable.

    “After six months, although on medication and a new prescription diet, there was really no improvement.”

    Then a friend told the couple, who also have a two-year old English Pointer called Humphrey and a wire haired Hungarian Vizsla, Bryn, 14, about the boots she’d bought for her dog to protect it’s paws while they were out working.

    The boots, which had to be shipped over from a specialist company in Canada, have a soft rubber sole and are attached using velcro.

    Millie has two sets – one for summer and another for the winter months.

    Vicki said: “The first time she wore them, she just stared at them. She was kicking her back legs out when she walked but she soon got used to them.

    “Now she won’t leave the house without them. When we get ready to go out, Humphrey brings them to her with their leads. It’s quite funny.

    “Moat people we see when out walking assume I’ve dressed her up for fashion, like a silly handbag dog, which annoys me.

    “The boots are for medical reasons. Some dog owners, however, are fascinated by them and many say they would like some to help their dogs with cut paws and weak bags legs, so I now carry cards around with me with the name of the boots to give out.

    “Luckily, they’re stocked in the UK now so we don’t have to pay shipping.”

    “I don’t know where we’d be without her boots.

    “The other big change we’ve made is to feed her a completely raw and natural diet. This means no man-made products, such as dried or tinned food – just 100% raw meat and vegetables, just as dogs would have got in the wild hundreds of years ago.

    “Her body handles it so much better than any of the prescription foods.

    “It’s like she’s a different dog.”



    http://tinyurl.com/loqbfz3

    Video Highlights
    0:18 Kit includes
    0:37 First step before starting install
    1:20 Cutting to length
    3:04 Insulating the Chimney Liner
    4:29 How to lower into the chimney
    5:40 Next Step will be Attaching to the appliance
    6:00 Attaching the appliance adapter
    7:16 Installing the insert
    7:44 Installing the Top Plate
    8:51 Cutting the access liner off
    10:23 Attaching the Cap
    11:44 Silicone the screws

    Robert explains how to install Chimney Liner.

    Installing a stainless steel chimney liner is an easy and economical way to repair a deteriorated, unsafe, or inefficient chimney flue. You will be able to install a chimney liner after reading this and watching the video. You can do the job with common household tools. A chimney liner should be installed to reduce the chance of a carbon monoxide leak, chimney fire, and creosote buildup. Chimney liners also improve the energy efficiency of the appliance and makes fireplace maintenance easier.

    First, determine the appropriate size chimney liner for your specific setup. The chimney liner diameter size you will need will be the same size of the exhaust outlet on the appliance. The chimney liner length you will need will equal the height of the chimney. we recommend ordering slightly over that amount to give room for error.

    Only a few tools are needed for a successful chimney liner installation. You’ll need a tin snips (or a sawzall or hacksaw), drill and bit, flat head screw driver, caulk gun, work gloves, and safety glasses.

    Every basic chimney liner kit is going to come with four main components: the stainless steel chimney liner, connector (either a Tee connector or a Stove Top connector), top plate, and rain cap. This video shows a basic stove top installation.The top plate is going to be the main variable for a chimney liner kit.

    Start by using your knife and remove the plastic wrap that the liner is coiled in. Once you have the liner out, start to straighten the liner. Make sure to do this on the grass or a soft surface so you don’t puncture it. Straighten the liner out as best as you can. It does not need to be perfect as you will have to do some manipulation to get it down the chimney.

    After installing the insulation you will need to get the liner to the top of the chimney. Proceed to lower the liner down the chimney until you reach the damper or smoke shelf. You will need to do some adjustments when you get back inside to get it through this.

    Twisting the flexible liner will help you install the liner if you are getting caught or hung up on the chimney walls.

    Now you will need to head into the house to finish connecting the appliance.

    Once the stove connection has been installed correctly, it is time to connect the stove pipe to the stove. Most stove pipe comes with three screws per connection point. Use your drill and drive the screws into the horizontal part of the tee and through the exhaust collar of the stove. using furnace cement to secure and stop any leaks.

    Once the chimney liner is all the way down the flue to the point of the appliance, the next step is to connect the top plate to the top of the chimney. The main function for a top plate is to seal the existing flue from rain, wind and critters from entering the chimney. Start by using your caulk gun and a tube of weather resistant high-temp silicone to run a bead of silicone along the top edge of the clay flue.

    Next, thread the chimney liner through the round collar of the top plate so that the top plate is sitting on the top edge of the clay flue.

    When you have successfully installed the top plate, the next step is to cut the excess liner flush with the top of the collar of the top plate. Your sawzall or hacksaw will work just fine.

    The next step is to secure the rain cap to the top plate. The Cap will just slide over and then tighten the clamp.

    Congratulations, you have successfully installed a stainless steel, flexible chimney liner!

    Click Here:http://tinyurl.com/lxloa28 To see all of our Chimney Liners.

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