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Reviews (4)

Aug 18, 2019
Excellent, easy to install, fits well, works perfectly.
1 of 1 found this helpful This part fit well and works perfectly.
I had the older style on my 18 1/2" Weber (from about 2004), held together by a nut that had rusted in place, but once I sawed that off to take the rest of the cleaning system apart, the new one fit right in.
The instructions are easy to follow; all you have to do is stack everything in the right order and the handle bar holds it in place.
Also make sure you orient the interior "wing" pieces so the vent holes are closed with the bar all the way against one of the legs, so you'll be able to tell that the holes are closed even if the grill is full. I blew that step the first time and had to wait 15 years to fix it.

Aug 18, 2019
Gas cans work better than new.
Does just what it's supposed to: gas pours much more smoothly now.
The older plastic cans used to have vents like this, but the built-in vents on the modern, Bureau-Of-Compliance-approved "safety" spouts are garbage so you still need the extra vent.
Just make sure when you drill the hole you hold the (empty) can upside down so you don't get shavings inside.
Also, as long as you're upgrading back to 1980s technology, buy a non-safety spout kit and never spill gas again.
The Exeter Book: An Anthology of Anglo-Saxon Poetry Presented to Exeter: New
Aug 01, 2018
This is ONLY the first 8 poems, NOT the whole Exeter Book
You can't tell from the cover, but this is ONLY volume 1 of what was originally a 3-volume side-by-side translation of the 11th century Exeter Book. It contains just the first 8 Old English poems (Christ, St. Guthlac, Azariah, The Phoenix, St. Juliana, The Wanderer, The Endowments of Men and A Father's Instruction) with modern English translation on the facing pages. This book does NOT contain the famous riddles.
As for the content it actually does contain, this is a modern photocopy of the first volume of a 19th-century translation of the 11th-century Exeter Book. It is a clear, legible facsimile of Sir Israel Gollancz's 1895 work. The copied source is a library book with some pen marks, none of which interfere with the text. Entertainingly, the book includes one full-page photo of two fingers in finger cots attempting to photocopy the table of contents.
If all you want is the first 8 poems, then I highly recommend this. I can't speak to the quality of the translation, as I am not very good at Anglo Saxon.
If you want the whole Exeter Book without translations, the go-to edition seems to be by a man named Krapp.
There is also an 1842 side-by-side translation by a Benjamin Thorpe under the title Codex Exoniensis that seems to include everything. I should have bought that one.