1PK Southland 1-1/4 In. x 4-1/2 In. Welded Steel Galvanized Nipple

1PK Southland 1-1/4 In. x 4-1/2 In. Welded Steel Galvanized Nipple
Angle View: 1PK Southland 1-1/4 In. x 4-1/2 In. Welded Steel Galvanized Nipple
1PK Southland 1-1/4 In. x 4-1/2 In. Welded Steel Galvanized Nipple
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Detailed product description

Welded steel pipe. Hot dipped galvanized, meets ASTM A/53 standards. Schedule 40, standard pipe. Import. Each Pipe Nipple Is Individually shrink wrapped.;

Customer Reviews 5 star 3 4 star 1 3 star 0 2 star 0 1 star 0 4 customer reviews 4.5 out of 5 stars Write a review. 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful My lack of dinner without Andre - 4 & 1/2 stars By OwlSong - January 26, 2014 Verified Purchase Here's a film that might at first seem frustrating at times, but gradually grows in fascination & sheer watchability. The plot, such as it is? An American art dealer in Liverpool meets an English art dealer in the strangely empty restaurant of their hotel. Unable to find anyone else in the kitchen, they set out to find dinner ... an overnight journey that somehow leads them through several countries around the world, as they converse about the banal, the bizarre, and those fleeting insights that pass like birds before our eyes, hardly noticed. Well, as the opening titles proclaim this "An Exterminating Angel Film" a la Bunuel, it's clear that we're in Surreal territory. At first I was trying too hard to make sense of it, to fit everything together; but once I simply relaxed & went with it, simply enjoying the journey itself, it made a lot more sense on a visceral level, just as long as I didn't try to put it into words. In short, it has the quality of a vivid dream, one that's crystal-clear while inside of it, but is hard to grasp once you wake. It does remind me of "My Dinner With Andre" in some ways, but it's more like one of Andre's otherworldly experiences than that film's conversation itself. + Read more Was this review helpful to you? Yes No 3 of 3 people found the following review helpful Waiting for... By Matthew D. Reel - February 25, 2009 Bennie has just arrived in Liverpool, obviously on business, but the details are sketchy. He arrives at this gorgeous hotel that has about as many quirks as any place I've seen on film. The doors have no room numbers, the hallways are a maze, and everything is completely dark. It is agonizing watching this man drag all of his luggage through such emptiness, we can only sympathize with him. But it is a minor tragedy, afterall, and soon Bennie finds his room. That's how this film is structured, a series of miniscule and minor tragedies painting an oddly dark landscape. Having set up shop with his computer, printer, and coffee pot (in a jacuzzi suite that has only one electrical outlet), Bennie soon finds himself bored. He goes through books, paces around, blesses the room with sage smoke... Yes, this is an odd little movie. But we see that he is waiting for something, he keeps glancing at his cell phone... Nobody calls, so Bennie decides the best bet is to find something to eat. The hotel's restaurant is this wide open ballroom, as beautiful as it is obnoxious with an abundance of chandeliers and very bright lighting... It is empty, sans one other person. Bennie is seated next to another businessmen patiently awaiting his meal. The time lingers and soon enough, Bennie makes just enough of an + Read more Was this review helpful to you? Yes No 15 of 15 people found the following review helpful A duo's surreal search for sustenance By Wayne - May 30, 2001 The film begins by showing us the grand old buildings of Liverpool, England. An old man walks in front of one of them and in the next shot enters Lime Street Station. You wouldn't think that this is relevant, but it is. In Alex Cox's Three Businessmen most things that are on view in the frame are relevant. Cox describes the film as "Bu��uelian". You could say that it is something along the lines of one of the maestro's films, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeosie, because the two main protagonists have the same problem - they can't seem to find a meal and a place to eat. The two main protagonists in question are art dealers Bennie Reyes (Miguel Sandoval) and Frank King (Alex Cox). The two men meet while waiting for food in a hotel's dining room. The food doesn't arrive, and the eerie hotel is mysteriously empty, so the chaps go in search of a meal around Liverpool, which proves to be a difficult task as their search is thwarted constantly. Their crusade takes them into foreign locations, even though the men think they are in Liverpool throughout. It's a very enjoyable and inventive surreal film. The DVD picture is in widescreen and fine. The sound is in Dolby 2.0 and alright. The main menu is a static shot of the Three Businessmen and has the Debbie Harry song, "Ghost Riders in the Sky playing". There are eight chapters. The extras are just a commentary by director Alex Cox and writer/producer Tod Davies. It is an excellent commentary featuring amusing commercial interludes by Alex Cox. Tod Davies is good, too, explaining all the background on the making of the + Read more Was this review helpful to you? Yes No See all 4 customer reviews


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Product Id 2235016
User Reviews and Ratings 3 (1 ratings) 3 out of 5 stars
UPC 013131139594

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1PK Southland 1-1/4 In. x 4-1/2 In. Welded Steel Galvanized Nipple
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