Monday, December 19, 2011

How Hot Surface Igniters Work

!±8± How Hot Surface Igniters Work

Hot Surface Igniters were invented in 1969 and are made of advanced ceramic materials. This invention relates generally to electronic oven control circuits and, more particularly, to an electronic oven control circuit for a gas oven having a hot surface igniter. Gas oven control systems which utilize hot surface igniters, resistive elements which are heated by the application of electrical current, are widely used because of their durability and reliability.

While they cannot be bent or reshaped they are known to be fairly fragile and can be damaged during transit or even installation if the proper precautions are not taken.

Hot surface igniters do weaken and will eventually generate less heat than they normally could and should be replaced when this occurs. Hot Surface Igniters can be purchased from your local appliance service center or HVAC service center however should be installed by professional service personnel.

If you have an appliance that is failing it is most likely not due to faults in the igniter itself, it may be exposed to excessive voltage, the appliance may be operating at too high a temperature, or the igniter may have been damaged prior to installation. If the hot surface igniter is glowing red hot but the appliance does not fire you should call for professional service.

The two most common problems with hot surface igniters are breakage and premature burnout. They can also quit part way through cooking, in other words the oven may cycle a couple of times and then it just sits there with the red glow from the igniter.

The hot surface igniter is generally positioned in the path of flow of a fuel gas or gas/air mixture, this flow being controlled with an electrically actable valve. As the gas passes the hot surface igniter, the gas is ignited and heat is produced. The electrically operated valve is energized to a level which causes it to open only when current passed through the hot surface igniter has heated it to a sufficient gas ignition temperature.


How Hot Surface Igniters Work

Sharp Lc32d47ut Clearance Sale

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Gas Range Safety

Find out how your gas range affects your indoor air quality - and what to do about it. Dan Michelsen (aka the Energy Doctor) is a certified Home Performance with Energy Star consultant, solar expert and CEO of Performance Energy, Inc. of Wausau, WI. For information on how to contact him, go to www.PerformanceEnergyInc.com.

!8!# Manganese Greensand Filter Best 45 Pound Olympic Bar Top Quality

Saturday, November 12, 2011

aesrepair

Specializing in repair of various home appliances such as refrigerators, built-in microwave oven, washer, dryers, cook tops, ranges, ovens, ice machines, freezers and HVAC (Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditioning) unit's, both commercial and residential. When working with all top of the line appliances such as Miele, Sub Zero, Wolf, BOSCH, Frigidaire, Whirlpool, Kenmore -- makes our team of technicians very knowledgeable and experienced. Visit www.aesrepair.com or call 800-520-7044

Kitchenaid 5 Quart Artisan Get It Now! Desk Lamp Dimmer Quickly Save Stray Cat Shelter

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Wolf Challenger XL commercial gas range C36-S-6B-N

!±8± Wolf Challenger XL commercial gas range C36-S-6B-N


Rate : | Price : | Post Date : Nov 06, 2011 06:22:08
Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Coupon Led Recessed Lights Wu Tang Sweatshirt Sale

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Hollywood, Aliens, And A Christmas Story - Modern Pop Culture Images Of Hungarians in the US

!±8± Hollywood, Aliens, And A Christmas Story - Modern Pop Culture Images Of Hungarians in the US

“They’re heeeeerrrrreeeeee…”: Alien-(n)ation.

One of the most enduring and entertaining images of Hungarians during the second half of the 20th century is the idea of Hungarians as aliens or Martians. Much of this is tongue-in-cheek, is not intended to be pejorative, and has been exploited to good effect and with great enjoyment by Hungarians themselves - to the point of their likely having been behind its origination. There are multiple overlapping/competing descriptions of how all this started. Consensus suggests that it came out of the circles of émigré nuclear scientists, physicists, and mathematicians who came to the US during 1930s and 1940s, many of whom were collocated at Los Alamos, New Mexico for the Manhattan Project.

As George Marx, a Hungarian professor of atomic physics in Budapest, asks in his extremely engaging chapter entitled “The Martians’ Vision of the Future,” how is it that there were groups of Austrians, Germans, and Italians involved in these scientific breakthroughs and yet it was Hungarians alone who seemed to gain the moniker and association of “alien?” Marx appears to prefer the account according to which one day the Italian Enrico Fermi was speculating about the universe and the possibility of life on other planets, and Leo Szilard, a Hungarian, ventured an answer to Fermi’s question:

“And so,” Fermi came to his overwhelming question, “if all this has been happening, they should have arrived here by now, so where are they?” It was Leo Szilard, a man with an impish sense of humor, who supplied the perfect reply to Fermi's rhetoric: “They are among us,” he said, “but they call themselves Hungarians.” (according to Marx, this is Francis Crick’s version of the myth)

Marx elaborates on the “birth to a legend”:

The myth of the Martian origin of the Hungarian scientists who entered world history on American soil during World War II probably originated in Los Alamos. Leon Lederman, director of the Fermilab, reported possible hidden intentions. The production of scientists and mathematicians in the early 20th century was so prolific that many otherwise calm observers believe Budapest was settled by Martians in a plan to infiltrate and take over the planet Earth…According to myth, at a top secret meeting of the Manhattan Project, General Groves left for the gents' room. Szilard then said: “Perhaps we may now continue in Hungarian!” Hungarian émigrés enjoyed speaking their mother tongue whenever a chance offered itself. This has made them look suspicious. Los Alamos was a place of top security. General Groves was annoyed that Neumann and Wigner had frequent telephone conversations in Hungarian. [Teller, talk in Budapest 1991.] The “thick Hungarian accent” was often heard even in the corridors of the Pentagon. (The Lugosi accent made the alien power of Dracula, the count from the faraway Transylvania even more realistic.)

Marx recounts the details of the arrival of the Martians-cum-Hungarians on planet Earth:

--Gabor, von Kármán, Kemeny, von Neumann, Szilard, Teller, and Wigner were born in the same quarter of Budapest [author’s note—most were Jewish…it is interesting to note that some anti-Semitic Hungarian nationalists at the same time assiduously include these names in lists of famous Hungarians]. No wonder the scientists in Los Alamos accepted the idea that well over one thousand years ago a Martian spaceship crashlanded somewhere in the center of Europe. There are three firm proofs of the extraterrestrial origins of the Hungarians: they like to wander about (like gypsies radiating out from the same region). They speak an exceptionally simple and logical language which has not the slightest connection with the language of their neighbors. And they are so much smarter than the terrestrials. (In a slight Martian accent John G. Kemeny added an explanation, namely, that it is so much easier to learn reading and writing in Hungarian than in English or French, that Hungarian kids have much more time left to study mathematics.) [quoted by Marx from “Yankee” Magazine (?) 1980] ([http://www.mek.iif.hu/kiallit/tudtor/tudos1/martians.html])

Finally, in a somewhat more serious vein, the alien connotation has been explained in analytical terms as follows:

If we understand SteeDee's theory correctly, the first Hungarians-
are-aliens story arose from some minor human incident. The
Hungarians may have stood out from the rest of the staff at Los
Alamos, perhaps by maintaining their own cliques and speaking
their own indecipherable tongue, and this made the English
speakers uncomfortable. The Hungarians were like aliens to the
rest, and since there were many reports of "flying saucers" in the
popular press in the 50s and late 40s, the "Martian" label was a
convenient way to sublimate the social tensions. To be called
extraterrestrials, in a jocular, rib-poking way, might have helped
reduce this social friction both inside and outside the Hungarian
group. If there was a problem with communication, the recurring
alien joke would provide a means to make light of it, thereby
expressing frustrations that could not otherwise be spoken. (http://www.ufomind.com/area51/desertrat/1995/dr29/ )

According to Marx, “as a matter of fact, these suspicious Hungarians—Theodore von Kármán, John von Neumann, Leo Szilard—enjoyed the myth. Edward Teller became especially happy of his E.T. initials, but he complained about indiscretion, ‘Von Kármán must have been talking’.”

From Teller to Talleah…Zsa Zsa and Her Sisters

This brings us from Teller to Talleah, the difference being that Teller was a real Hungarian scientist who pretended to play the part of an alien…whereas Talleah is the name of an alien from the 1958 King of the B Sci-fi Movies, “Queen of Outer Space”…starring none other than perhaps the most well-known Hungarian among Americans, Zsa Zsa Gabor, who plays the role of an alien scientist! [More about this hysterical film and its hysterical reviews below.]

Of course, June 1989 put Hungarians on the map for many Americans. The reburial of Imre Nagy, the huge crowds, the solemn ceremony before hundreds of thousands and a live television audience, a landmark event in the history of Hungary…No, that was 16 June 1989…I am referring here to 14 June 1989, the day Zsa Zsa slapped a Beverly Hills police officer, an incident that immediately became fodder for every late night comedian and even two years later was the subject of a spoof starring the actress in the satirical film series, the Naked Gun. Such is the fate of Hungary and Hungarians in the United States.

There were actually three Gabor sisters: Zsa Zsa, Eva, and Magda. I am not sure whether to say marriage or divorce ran in the family. The three sisters had more marriages than they did important movie roles. To borrow a page from Dave Barry in another context (Dave Barry Slept Here, Random House 1989, p. 101), here are the final tallies of the three sisters in Marriages:

Final (?) Gabor Sister Marriage Standings

Zsa Zsa 9* *** ****

Magda 6**

Eva 5

*It is difficult to know how exactly to calculate Zsa Zsa’s total number of husbands…since as she once responded: “How many husbands have I had? You mean apart from my own?”

**These numbers may be affected by the fact that both Zsa Zsa and Magda were married to the English actor George Sanders, if sixteen years apart. Not to make too much light of things, but Sanders eventually committed suicide. He played the part of Mr. Freeze in the Batman television series, that Zsa Zsa made guest appearances on (see below).

***It seemed only fitting in early 2007 surrounding the macabre and absurd Anna Nicole Smith custody fight that Zsa Zsa’s most recent husband—Prinz von Anhalt—claimed that he had a ten year affair with Anna Nicole and was the father of her orphaned child. (Supposedly, Zsa Zsa was angered and hurt by this admission, but can one completely discount the possibility that it was yet another attempt for Zsa Zsa to get back in the limelight, and after all, hadn’t Anna Nicole Smith been famous for being famous.)

****It may surprise almost no one in a certain sense, but Zsa Zsa’s daughter by Conrad Hilton (the only child of all three Gabor sisters) is grand-aunt to Paris and Nicole Hilton.

Zsa Zsa claims that she won the 1936 Hungarian beauty pageant (according to one Hungarian source, Sandor Incze who discovered Zsa Zsa, invented the idea of the beauty pageant…don’t think so), although her mother Jolie (“pretty” in French), married only twice, and fond of “new math” long before we knew it was new—like her daughters she seemed genetically incapable of telling her true age; if she was telling the truth her first daughter, Magda, would have been born when Jolie was thirteen!—claimed it was she (the mother) and not Zsa Zsa who had won the beauty pageant. (To use the famous Casey Stengel line “You can look it up!”…these things should be verifiable, although I will leave that to others to investigate since it is beyond the intended scope of this paper.)

The “Queen of Outer Space” or “Damn it, Jim, I’m a Former Hungarian Beauty Queen, Not a(n Alien) Scientist”

Zsa Zsa’s film career is summarized by the online film critic “Jabootu” as follows:

Unfortunately, Ms. Gabor’s Hollywood career proved much less epic [than her married life or run-ins with the law]. In John Huston’s 1952 Moulin Rouge, Zsa Zsa played, in a bold move, a Euro-sexpot opposite Jose Ferrer’s Toulouse-Lautrec. The following year she appeared in a supporting role in the musical Lili, which co-starred the unrelated but similarly monikered Mel Ferrer. From there, though, it was all downhill. Her few starring roles included playing twins (!!) in the hilarious-sounding espionage meller Girl in the Kremlin. In case you’re wondering, one of the twins [is] Stalin’s mistress (!!), the other a spy working against the Soviets. Zsa Zsa also had a bit part in Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil. (http://www.jabootu.com/queen.htm)

But perhaps “Jabootu” is being too hasty and superficial in judging Ms. Gabor’s career. Maybe we have underestimated Zsa Zsa’s roles in movie and television. For example, Zsa Zsa has recounted how she liked playing the role of “spy” when she guest-starred on the Batman serial as Minerva, a beauty parlor owner, whose hairdryers could read the minds of (male) clients. Was the episode perhaps a skillful allegory about how the totalitarian state uses the most banal and subversive means to pry into the lives of its citizens? (Was the “mullet” a communist plot to make Americans look stupid? Tune in next time, same Battime, same Batchannel…)

Evidence for such a, more enlightened, revisionist view comes from the 1958 movie “Queen of Outer Space,” in which Zsa Zsa plays Talleah, an alien scientist, who leads the women of Venus against the sadistic, disfigured Queen Yllana, thereby saving a flight crew of men from Earth whom Yllana has cruelly imprisoned. I argue here that this film only appears to be a sexist, cheesy, and moronic vehicle for profit, when in fact that is part of its subterfuge and inner-brilliance. The movie is, in fact, a subtle and sophisticated allegory of communist Hungary and the outbreak and crushing of the 1956 Hungarian uprising. Let us take another look at this film—although, unfortunately, we are forced to rely on the flippant and sometimes juvenile comments of “Jabootu” for a discussion of the plot.

In this first extended excerpt, we find Zsa Zsa’s Talleah (symbolizing the Hungarian resistance) being informed that recently arrived Earthmen (“bourgeois” intellectuals, “men” had been banished from the planet, although “scientists and mathematicians” were retained because they were needed) have been imprisoned by the evil Yllana (the communists/Soviets). Talleah recounts for the men, the sad history of the planet, the destructive war, how Yllana went from well-meaning rebel to tyrant, etc. The astute reader will notice here that Zsa Zsa is in fact recounting the destruction of World War II in Hungary—she says “Ten Earth years ago”!—the coming to power of the communists, the initial “popular” image of the Soviets as liberators, and their construction of a people’s dictatorship….

“To Be Hungarian Is Not Enough…”: Hollywood and Hungarians

As is to be expected of space travelers, Hungarians claim to have founded certain places…one of them being Hollywood. Adolph Zukor of Paramount Pictures, one of the early Hungarians in Hollywood is said to have had on the wall of his office an inscription: “TO BE A HUNGARIAN IS NOT ENOUGH.” To this George Marx adds, “in a low voice Adolph would add, ‘but it may help’.” He continues, “Non-Hungarians in Hollywood used to say, “If you have a Hungarian friend, you don't need an enemy.” The MGM commissary was said to have a sign which read, “Just because you’re Hungarian, doesn’t mean you’re a genius!”

The influence of Hungarians on Hollywood is astounding. In 1996, the Associated Press reported that of the 136 Oscar nominations since 1929, Hungarians had won 30 of them. Some of the names are more familiar than others. George Cukor—not to be confused with the aforementioned Adolph Zukor, “Mr. Motion Pictures,” founder of Paramount Pictures, and producer of perhaps the first film “Prisoner of Zenda”—captured five best director nominations, including for My Fair Lady (’Enry ’Iggins says of Zoltan Karpathy: “Every time we looked around there he was that hairy hound from Budapest. Never leaving us alone, never have I ever known a ruder pest.”). William Fox of “20th Century Fox” was born near Tokaj, Hungary, famous for its sweet wines. Among the better-known actors other than Bela Lugosi (born Bela Blasko) and the Gabor clan, we can name Leslie Howard, born Laszlo Steiner, and Tony Curtis, born Bernard Schwartz (born in Budapest, fluent in Hungarian), and Peter Lorre.

Speaking of Bela Lugosi…there is the following unforgettable exchange between Johnny Depp playing legendary B-moviemaker Ed Wood and Martin Landau (himself of interplanetary space travel frequently) in his Oscar-winning portrayal of aging, foul-mouthed, bitter, and morphine-addicted Bela Lugosi in Tim Burton’s “Ed Wood” (1994):

[Ed and Bela are watching Vampira's TV show.]
Ed Wood: Oh, I hate it when she interrupts the picture. She doesn't show 'em the proper respect.
Bela Lugosi: I think she's a honey. Look at those jugs!
[Bela Lugosi casts a love spell on Vampira who is on TV while moving his fingers like Dracula]
Edward D. Wood, Jr.: My Gosh, Bela, how do you do that?
Bela Lugosi: You must be double-jointed. And you must be Hungarian. [!]

Some “Hungarians” famous in film and television will come as a surprise. Drew Barrymore’s mother was Ildiko Jaid Mako. Jerry Seinfeld might talk about Ceausescu above, but his father was named Kalman Seinfeld. Paul Newman’s mother was Hungarian. And half of the famed animator set behind “The Simpsons” and a series of other cartoons, Klasky Csupo—Gabor Csupo—is a Hungarian (he fled Hungary in 1975 hiking through a 2 ½ hours through a darkened railway tunnel to Austria).

The trivia of all these cases is to say the least entertaining. Other great finds on the webenetics site are the following. Ilona Staller, aka Ciccolina, of blue movies and green politics, had a red father—a member of the early communist Interior Ministry. And Juan Epstein’s mother—whose signature concluded every excuse note Juan Epstein brought to class in the 1970s ABC sitcom “Welcome back, Kotter!”—is in fact Hungarian, Juan Epstein having been played by Robert Hegyes.

“What’s that? Hungarian roots?”: Budapest and Wanting the Other MTV

Then there are the Hungarian roots of rock and pop stars. Appropriately enough, while Art Garfunkel is of Romanian Jewish ancestry, Paul Simon is of Hungarian Jewish ancestry. Tommy Ramone, drummer for “The Ramones,” was born with the more sedate name of Thomas Erdelyi. We can salute Gene Simmons of KISS (or should it have been KISz?) as half-Hungarian, and you might find it ironic, but you ought to know that Alanis Morissette is supposedly half Hungarian. It also turns out that the father of the Knopfler brothers of the “Dire Straits” band was a Hungarian Jew who fled the Nazis to Glasgow in 1939.

The Hungarian tie of “Dire Straits” is interesting—even if probably entirely incidental—in light of the “video within a video” of the band’s most famous commercial/video success, “Money for Nothing (1985).” “Money for Nothing” is better known for its line “I want my MTV”—brilliant and somewhat satirical marketing, mention the video channel coming of age in an iconic way in your song/video and you will guarantee play there. (It was also the first video played when MTV Europe debuted on 1 August 1987—for those too young to remember, MTV, no not Magyar Televizio, was a brief experiment in playing something called “music videos” until reality shows killed the music video star). The premise, the inspiration of “Money for Nothing,” was a bunch of workers moving appliances and commenting while, as it turns outs, watching Sting’s “The Russians” video on a wall of TV screens. (Ooohhhh, Sting mentioned the Russians, do they really love their children too? Ooooohhhhh, how daring…because I’m sure the Russians do love their children too…1985, the eighties, ugh). I had always wondered about “the video within the video” since the bikini-clad “mama she got it stickin’ in the camera lens” model appears to be posing in the Halaszbastya (Fisherman’s Bastion on the Buda side of Budapest) which I had then just recently visited (May 1985, the video came out in September 1985). Turns out I wasn’t hallucinating for as Dennis O’Connell writes:

The video was produced by Steve Barron, who envisioned that the entire video be computer animated. The band wanted a live video. The final product was a mix: footage from Budapest enhanced by computers along with a computer generated character, Sal, which was inspired by Joe Pesci's character in Raging Bull.

Sting, the object of the workers’ derision that gave rise to the song, performs back up vocals on “Money for Nothing.” Bringing everything full circle, my Russian History professor in college decided to open his semester with “Money for Nothing” blaring as students entered the classroom.

Camp. La(s)zlo

In keeping with the alien riff, Hungarians love their inside jokes. The crowd-favorite, sentimentalist Hollywood film, “Casablanca,” with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman (nope, neither of them Hungarian), was directed by Michael Curtiz (Kertesz). S. Z. “Cuddles” Sakall, a Hungarian stage actor, played the role of Karl, the kindly Austrian waiter in Rick’s Café. The famous historian John Lukacs (author of Budapest 1900) among others has argued that there is a typical Hungarian inside joke in this film—or at least the film bears the marks of its Hungarian director. Ingrid Bergman’s underground, Czech resistance leader husband in the film is named Victor Laszlo. Now, of course, as Lukacs notes—personally, he describes the movie as “imbecile”—“Laszlo” is neither a first nor last name in Czech. It is, however a sometimes last name, but frequent first-name in Hungarian—and Curtiz was surrounded “by a slew of Hungarian scriptwriters in Hollywood, many of whose first names were Laszlo” (Lukacs, 1989, pp. 178-179). Hence, the name in the film. (There is also a popular contemporary cartoon named “Camp Lazlo,” but Lazlo is a Brazilian spider monkey, and as far as I can tell there is in no conscious Hungarian connection behind the name choice.)

But I would argue there are even better inside Hungarian jokes than that of “Victor Laszlo” woven into movies, as I will now demonstrate.

The Boy Named Wolf in Hungarian Who Made Ralphie Cry…

It took over 30,000 feet, several time zone changes, and countless years to figure it out. A few years ago (2001) I was flying out west and scanning the music channels for the headphones. On the classical music channel I suddenly came upon a familiar tune. Yes, there it was: the tune that would repeat everytime the school bully would appear in the lovable, sentimental, nostalgia-fest for a life that few of us ever lived, that is “A Christmas Story (1983).” I thought I recognized the music: it was Sergei Prokofiev’s famous “Peter and the Wolf,” and the theme—that which Prokofiev used for the wolf—became the school bully’s signature in the film. Upon the first hearing of this tune, when the school bully makes his first frightening appearance, the reminiscing “Ralphie,” the little boy who is the main protagonist of the movie, exclaims, “it was Farkas, Scott Farkas, the school bully…he had yellow eyes, yellow eyes I tell you.” (Ralphie’s younger brother, Randy “lay there like a slug…it was his only defense”!)

(Spoiler Warning!: When I came to this personal epiphany in 2001, and even while I was writing this article in 2005, there was no indication on the Internet that anybody else had recorded this observation, which led me to question whether an overactive imagination had gotten the best of me yet again. What a great difference two years can be in the Internet age: now a google search for “farkas wolf ‘christmas story’ prokofiev” yields 123 hits, beginning with the wikipedia entry for the film!)

Why is this important you ask? Well, if you know Hungarian, you will know that “farkas” is the Hungarian word for “wolf.” Therefore, to play the theme of the “wolf” from Prokofiev’s work—a piece drafted, it would appear, for children to learn the various instruments of an orchestra—is to play an obscure “inside joke” on the viewers of the film. (Making it even better is the fact that the actor who plays the part of Ralphie is Peter! Billingsley.) Jean Shepherd, upon whose book the movie is based—and who also narrates the film from the perspective of an adult Ralphie looking back on his childhood—appears to have chosen the name of the bully, “Scott (Scut) Farkas,” himself. The story is set in 1940s northwestern Indiana—significantly, Prokofiev’s “Peter and the Wolf” debuted in 1936 and became the subject of a Disney cartoon—so the presence of people of Hungarian ancestry and last names is plausible.

It is always possible that the Prokofiev-wolf-farkas nexus is just an unintentional, if very witty happenstance. But the idea of it having been one of the ultimate Hungarian “inside jokes”—although Jean Shepherd does not appear to have been Hungarian himself—is enhanced by the comparatively unknown and definitely less memorable sequel to “A Christmas Story,” “It Runs in the Family (1994),” in which Ralphie’s father recounts the story of “the Hungarian barber’s cross-eyed daughter.” Shepherd died in 1999, but as with many common last names from other cultures—and farkas can perhaps be deemed one of those—growing up with Hungarian acquaintances it is conceivable that Shepherd would have known the meaning of the name in Hungarian.

“Honky”: The Hungarian Roots of a Racial Epithet

Speaking of the Hungarian(-American) “working class” in the Chicago environs. According to the entry on the wikipedia: Honky, Honkey or Honkie is an American racial slur for a Caucasian, usually applied to males. The word “honky” as a pejorative for Caucasians comes from "bohunk" and "hunky". In the early 1900’s, these were derogatory terms for Bohemian, Hungarian, and Polish immigrants. According to Robert Hendrickson, author of the Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, Black workers in Chicago meat-packing plants picked up the term from white workers and began applying it indiscriminately to all Caucasians.

Honky, was later adopted as a pejorative meaning white, in 1967 by black militants within SNCC seeking a rebuttal for the term nigger. They settled on a familiar word they felt was disparaging to certain Americans of European descent; hunkie meaning an American of Slavic or Hungarian descent.

In the Simpsons cartoon series, Homer Simpson is fond of saying when something goes wrong, particularly at the nuclear power plant where he works, “blame it on Tibor, the guy who doesn’t speak English.” One can imagine that this is something of an inside joke among the creators of the Simpsons, since the chief cartoonist Gabor Csupo is Hungarian (supposedly Hank Azaria’s character Dr. Nick Riviera, a quack physician, is supposed to be a parody of Ricky Ricardo on “I Love Lucy”—“Hi e-ver-y-bo-dy!”—but coworkers just assumed he was making fun of Gabor. Personally, I have always thought he sounds oddly like Andrei Codrescu on NPR…) According to the online urban dictionary of slang, “blame it on…Tibor” has entered at least some marginal popular discourse as shorthand for blaming the foreigner—thus in keeping perhaps, unintentionally, with the roots of “Honky”:

A tibor is someone in your office whom you blame when you have done something stupid, illegal, or immoral. Typically the person is someone who cannot defend themself. Especially effective when the Tibor cannot speak English. “You'll have to jiggle the handle. That idiot, Tibor, lost the key.”


Hollywood, Aliens, And A Christmas Story - Modern Pop Culture Images Of Hungarians in the US

Stihl 290 Chainsaw Best Merrick Dog Treat Top Quality

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Find the Best Lender For You - Tips From a Realtor to Get the Best Lender For Your Home Purchase

!±8± Find the Best Lender For You - Tips From a Realtor to Get the Best Lender For Your Home Purchase

Having a great lender on your side makes you entire experience so much easier. Your most important people in your real estate transaction are your agent and your loan broker. Make sure that both of them are AWESOME!

If I came to the realization today that it was time for me to buy a home, the first thing I would do is find a lender I could trust. Any time I talk with new clients or referrals, one of the first couple of questions I ask is whether they have been prequalified or preapproved by a lender.

There's a difference between prequalification and preapproval. These terms get thrown around a lot, and they are not the same. Between the two, preapproval is better. Prequalification is like telling a loan officer about your financial situation over the phone to see whether things jive with what you are trying to accomplish. Preapproval is a full-blown credit check with verification of your assets and income. Because people always embellish their personal situation, a prequalification may not be accurate or offer much insight. It's like asking a lender, "If I make about this much, and I have this credit score, and I am looking to get a loan for so many dollars, do you think I can get the loan?" This is kind of ridiculous: there's no reason for the lender not to say "Of course!" just to get you in the office! For these reasons and more, preapproval is the way to go; the numbers never lie when they look at your financials and check your credit, and when you are preapproved by a trustworthy lender, you can be confident that you will be able to get a loan.

The best lenders are the ones that you are referred to. TV commercials and lenders you find on the web are NOT COOL! These are shady lenders that may sell your information to other sources, or "get" you with a teaser rate that's only available for perfect borrowers with spotless credit, who make way more money than you. On the other hand, your brother's friend's uncle that does loans part-time from his home office doesn't fit the optimal description of a good loan officer either! It all comes down to who you know, or who you can get connected with.

When looking for a good loan officer, there are a couple sources to consider. You could ask your Realtor for referrals. In fact, a professional agent that works with lenders every day is the BEST person to ask for a referral to a lender. We Realtors know which lenders do their job the best, and which to avoid. If one of your friends or family members just closed a transaction and had a positive experience with a lender or loan officer, this would also be a terrific place to start.

Banks vs. Brokers

There are two very different kinds of loan officers: mortgage bankers and mortgage brokers. Put simply, a mortgage banker works at a bank that offers loans, while a mortgage broker finds a loan from one of several banks. There are benefits to each, and neither way is clearly better than the other: it all comes down to personal preference.

To go with a mortgage banker, walk into the bank and say to the banker, "Hey Mr. Banker, I would like to apply for a home loan!" The banker will sit you down, and offer whatever loans that particular bank is offering at that particular time. The Banker might say, "Do you want Loan A, Loan B or Loan C?" By contrast, a brokerage has dozens and dozens of relationships with banks, putting a lot of options at its disposal. After all, every borrower is different, and every bank offers different guidelines for lending. If you are self-employed, certain banks might not offer you a good loan. Similarly, maybe you are a teacher or government worker or in the military; some mortgage brokers specialize in these professions and would do a much better job than a typical big bank loan. A good mortgage broker will be able to find a solution (a good loan that fits) for most borrower types.

Other issues that would cause a borrower to need to look elsewhere than the largest banks are if you have a smaller than average down payment, less than stellar credit, or the need for a larger allowance for closing costs, or if you are financing a condo that has issues with the HOA, among many, many others. The list of things that lenders scrutinize changes weekly. This really emphasizes the point that, no matter whether you use a bank or a broker, the person you actually deal with must KNOW HIS OR HER STUFF INSIDE AND OUT. Research, ask questions, test them, and pick the best person. May the best and most experienced loan person win your business!

Is there a difference in costs between a mortgage bank and mortgage broker? Yes. For the most part, using a mortgage broker tends to be a bit more expensive in terms of the closing costs for your loan. Why? When you go with a brokerage as opposed to a big bank, your loan officer has a greater need to make a good impression and establish a relationship with you. He (or she) wants to do a job deserving of any referrals you may send over after a successful transaction. Your loan officer can be contacted directly, and you will establish a personal rapport and business relationship together. He will hold your hand the entire way throughout the transaction. Contrast this with a bigger bank, where you will still have a loan officer, but where the personal touch can sometimes erode. Of course, there are wonderful loan officers at the larger banks, but you should expect to get a bit more "hand holding" when you work with a broker. This being the case, they typically get compensated more for dealing with you on a more frequent basis.

Sometimes the big banks offer deals and incentives a broker just can't match. In order to get more loans closed, a big bank can give better deals, perhaps waiving the closing costs or offering rates that are not profitable to a smaller mortgage broker. Be savvy, ask a lot of questions, and do your homework! I love to talk, and I love it when my clients call me with questions about these sorts of offers!

Banks and brokers both have loan officers working for them. Your job is to make sure you get the warm and fuzzy feeling with your loan officer when you meet initially, and at the same time stay clear-headed and focused. Your loan officer can literally make you or break you, so make the right decision as to who will get your business.

There's one more factor, and you can take this one to the bank (pun intended). Sometimes it's not the best rate, but the best fit that you should be looking for. Some lenders just listen and take your order, without offering any alternatives. For example, some people go into the bank dead-set on a 30-year mortgage even if they're just planning on being in the home for four or five years, as if 30-year fixed rate mortgages were the ONLY way to finance a property. This is certainly not the case. As I write this book, 30-year rates are hovering around 5%, but the 5/1 Adjustable Rate Mortgages are in the 3.75% range! This can be a lot of savings for a loan that is a better fit for the borrower. Ask questions, and be a savvy borrower. At the end of the day, you have a lot of people who are there to help, but you are responsible for making sure you get a beneficial outcome.

I had one client who categorically refused to use a mortgage broker. He swore it would cost too much! He went into a big national bank and spoke to someone who seemed to be the "loan guy" at the bank. It turns out the fellow he talked to was some banking specialist, not a loan professional in any way. When the time came for my client to "lock in" his loan rate, I asked the banking specialist what the rates were for that day, and he said he did not know!

When you trust your business to a bank, you expect to work with someone who at least knows something so rudimentary as the going mortgage rate for the day. Worse, this poor fellow's file was sent all over the country in the bank's computer system, from Florida to Los Angeles, at various points in the process. About a dozen people touched his file, and he had very little ability to call and ask questions of any one person familiar with his file. This was frustrating and stressful, and it could have been avoided had my client made sure to work with a loan officer or mortgage professional from start to finish. So no matter where you go or who you work with, make sure that the one person who will be handling your file from beginning to end is a genuine loan officer. This way you have one person to call the entire time.

FYI: What Is an Adjustable Rate Mortgage?

When you see "5/1 ARM" in reference to a loan, this means that the loan is fixed at an initial interest rate for five years; then, one time each year after that, it readjusts to a benchmark index rate (usually the US Treasury or the LIBOR rate), plus perhaps a margin of profit for the lender, always spelled out clearly in the paperwork. A 10/2 ARM is fixed for ten years and adjusts two times each year thereafter.

My father took out a 5/1 ARM loan on his second home, fixed at 5.2%. After five years, it adjusted to an index where the rate was (then) 1.25%! The lender had a 2.25% margin, so the benchmark (adjusted) rate of 1.25% plus the margin of 2.25% gives us his new mortgage rate, a lovely 3.5%. Adjustable rate mortgages aren't always so bad! When rates go down, they can make a good rate even better. Check out the resource guide at the back of the book for more on this and for current rates on the most typical loan types.

Shopping Around

Do all your shopping for your loan before you spend any time looking for homes! Don't waste precious time in escrow trying to figure out who will give you the best rate and terms: you should have this all figured out before you look at your first house. This is because when your offer on a home gets accepted, you have a concise timeline to make sure you get approved for a loan. If you run past your deadline and find out that you can't qualify, you may lose your initial deposit for the property.

What's more, your loan officer will need one hundred percent of your focus and attention, and as much time as possible, to build your file, get the necessary financial information and application paperwork, and submit to the underwriter (the god of the lending world) for approval. If you are speaking to multiple loan officers under this timeline (called the contingency period, or due diligence period), you may not be able to get the approval on time. Worse, as I said, you can lose your deposit if things go sour.

Also, loan officers may not want to deal with you if you are still shopping around during your contingency period. After all, they know you are setting yourself up for potential disaster, not to mention affirming your lack of faith in the process. Avoid this situation. Do the shopping around at the beginning, and choose a loan and loan officer that fit your needs before you go any farther.

The best start to the process might be to find three good mortgage referrals. I usually give my clients three or four business cards from the loan officers I use most. I give referrals to both mortgage brokers and banks so my clients have options. When you shop around, do ask each loan officer for a Good Faith Estimate (GFE), which should be provided free of cost. This allows you to compare lenders on an apples-to-apples basis. A note of caution: a lot of charges (closing costs) need to be estimated in the GFE, so they make an educated guess on these fees. An example of this is escrow and title charges, which are not specific lender charges. Some lenders estimate high or low with these costs, and some lenders don't estimate at all, which would bring down their total cost to make your loan. Just be aware of what they are estimating and compare it to the others. Don't hesitate to ask your Realtor about any questions pertaining to this: a good Realtor can help with most general questions about this process for your loan.

Closing Costs

Closing costs are all of the costs paid by the buyer for the home purchase over and above the purchase price. A lot of ancillary services go into a home purchase; most people just don't realize this until the transaction has closed. There are loan, escrow, title, courier, notary, insurance, appraisal, credit check, and several other fees that accumulate throughout the transaction. The lender's portion of the total closing cost amount is almost always the biggest chunk.

Closing costs tend to range from about ,000 to ,000 and depending on the circumstance they could go higher. This means if you are putting down 20% on that 0,000 house (that's ,000, for the mathematically impaired), the total you need to come up with at the close of escrow is the ,000, plus the closing costs. For this reason, a lot of buyers opt to include a closing cost credit in their offer to offset the additional amount of monies needed at the close of escrow. More on this later.

At the end of every transaction, the escrow company handling your transaction will send you what is known as a HUD-1 Settlement Statement. This will show you where all the money went, and will specify all the final closing costs.

Be Prepared. Get Preapproved.

When I am dealing with a client who has already spoken to a lender, I know the client already has an idea of the home price or monthly payment desired. This takes a lot of guesswork out of the equation, and puts the buyer way ahead of the game in terms of preparation and focus. Furthermore, many buyers find mistakes on their credit reports during this process. Getting preapproved before beginning the home search will give you the time to address any problems and fix your report so your credit score goes higher. When clients come into my office for the first time with the preapproval in hand, and they know what they are looking for in a home, it eases the process for everyone involved. Simply put, being prepared goes a long way. Taking the time to get the right information together will make everything easier in the end.

The Wrong Way: Getting a Loan After Finding the House

Let's take an opposite approach - what's the worst that can happen? Let's say you come into my office, ask to see some homes, and refuse to get preapproved. Usually I would just turn you away, but for example's sake, let's say I take you on. We go and look for homes, and you find the perfect place after months of searching. We make an offer, it gets accepted, and we open escrow.

Now you have a very tight timeframe to make sure this is the home for you and get approved for a loan. You have 17 days to determine that this house is all good or cancel the deal, and you don't have a clue which lender or loan program you'll end up with. You don't know exactly what your down payment is, and you aren't sure of your credit. Against my advice to call the lenders I have recommended, you decide to go through lendingtree.com because they are offering a 4% fixed rate loan. After several days, you find out that you are not qualified for their program and end up going with my lender.

Now, seven days into the escrow, you are getting documentation to the lender and are finally making headway. By day 10, the lender gives you a "conditional thumbs-up," but you are wary and still think you can get a better interest rate. You are considering calling in on the Ditech 800 number because they are offing a fantastic rate as well, but you aren't telling me or the lender about this. My recommended lender pulls your credit and finds that your credit score is 607; without some repair, you won't be able to get a loan. The worst part is that your score is so low because of a correctable error that just needs time. This stinks: there is no way to do everything we need to do to get you approved for the loan in time!

In this scenario, you would be forced to back out of the agreement; otherwise, the seller would get the drift and cancel at the first opportunity! This is what happens when you do not go in prepared. Even if your credit were good, you would still be in a bad position were your loan not approved during the contingency period for any of a million reasons. You should not look at homes without being fully vetted for the loan you need. No good agent would show you any homes until you show them that you are approved, and thus worth their time.

So, if you are hot and heavy about finding a new home, then go get preapproved.

Typically, any lender will need the following minimum documentation when you are meeting up to get preapproved. Collect this data and contact us if you need a good referral for a lender to get started.

• Your driver's license;
• Your most recent two years' tax returns and/or W-2s;
• Your most recent two months' bank statements (all pages, all accounts);
• Your most recent two months' statements for all asset (stock, 401K, IRA, etc) accounts;
• Your most recent two months' pay stubs;
• Authorization to pull your credit.

Getting Your Credit Score Higher

There are a lot of myths concerning credit reports and what goes into determining your score. Google "FICO" if you don't believe me. Everybody has heard something from someone, and most of the time the info is false. So be skeptical, and do your homework. That said, here are a few pointers on maintaining and possibly improving your score before you get preapproved. For some, nothing short of professional credit

FYI: When it comes to boosting your score, consider the following steps:

• Keep credit card balances below 30% of the total credit limit. This will help boost your score, especially if you are consistent about it. This goes for all of your credit cards. If you are unable to pay the balance down below 30%, try calling your credit card company and get a credit limit increase so that your balance is proportionally lower, relative to the limit.
• Do not make any large consumer expenditures on credit before a home purchase. This sounds obvious, but you would be surprised how many people buy a car, a luxury, or a big appliance on credit, pushing up their debt and reducing their ability to borrow prior to buying their home. (PS: Buy the stainless steel appliances after you close escrow!)
• Maintain credit lines, even ones with zero balances. If you really want to cancel a card, it's not going to make that big of a deal (I did for a department store card that I opened to save on one large purchase), but for the most part keep your credit lines open.
• Don't be late. Late payments kill, especially those that are past due for 60 and 90+ days. Pay your bills on time all the time. You will not get a loan with more than 1 late payment within the past year! Get in line, pay on time, and call the professional credit repair referral found in the resource guide in the back of the book if you need help fast.
• If you see a discrepancy on your report that you think you can fix yourself, go to the big three credit bureaus' websites (Transunion, Equifax, and Experian) and look for the links to reporting an error on your credit report. Depending on the circumstance, they are usually pretty good at addressing errors within a few weeks. For anything more serious, a professional credit repair company is generally worth the cost.

FYI: Questions to Ask a Lender

When interviewing a lender, these are some of the must-ask questions. Make sure the lender understands that you are trying to find the most competitive rate, but that you are also looking for the professional that can provide the best service, advice, and fit for the loan program of choice.

• "Can you provide a good-faith estimate?"
• "Do you work with first-time homebuyers a lot?"
• "How long have you been in this field?" (A minimum of two years is a must!)
• If you're addressing a mortgage broker, "How many banks do you work with or have access to?" Anything close to 30 is fairly decent, and over 50 is super.
• If you're talking to a banker, ask "Why should I choose a large direct lender over a mortgage broker?" Also, "Do you have any special promotions or incentives for home loans right now?"


Find the Best Lender For You - Tips From a Realtor to Get the Best Lender For Your Home Purchase

Cheap Nuk Sippy Good Tv Cabinet !8!# Smith Home Gyms Buy

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Vulcan V36-2 36" Propane Gas 6 Burner Range with 1 Oven

!±8± Vulcan V36-2 36" Propane Gas 6 Burner Range with 1 Oven

Brand : Viking | Rate : | Price :
Post Date : Oct 18, 2011 12:22:28 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days


More Specification..!!

!8!# Power Swing Plus Order Where To Buy Snow Pusher Shovel

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Bertazzoni Master Series : A365GGVXENG 36 Pro-Style Gas Range, 5 Sealed Burners, Convection - NG

!±8± Bertazzoni Master Series : A365GGVXENG 36 Pro-Style Gas Range, 5 Sealed Burners, Convection - NG


Rate : | Price : | Post Date : Oct 14, 2011 02:49:37
Usually ships in 2-3 business days

BERTAZZONI cooking products originate in Emilia-Romagna, a region world-famous for its food. Precision-engineered to the highest specifications by the Bertazzoni family, who have been making high-quality ranges since the beginning of the last century, every appliance bearing the Bertazzoni name represents an unwavering commitment to quality.rnrnCooking with the 36-inch range is a delight. The four-burner worktop has heavy-duty cast iron grates. Included is Bertazzoni's exclusive Triple-ring power burner with dual valve controls which has separately controlled flames providing high-efficiency power, as well as a delicate low-simmer function. rnrnThe oven has a balanced air-flow fan convection to provide even heat distribution for single and multi-level roasting and baking, without flavor crossover. It also features a wide-area infrared gas grill. Bertazzoni's special Triple-glaze door ensures low-temperature external surfaces. rnrnThe Master Series shares the same features as the Professional Series such as 25-1/8" counter depth, 2 year parts and labor warranty, high efficiency burners, special safety thermocouple design, dual fan European convection oven and extra-large infrared broiler.rn

Ro Faucet Air Gap Buy Now

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Cooktops - Gas Vs Induction

!±8± Cooktops - Gas Vs Induction

I'm often asked by my customers which cooktop is better - gas or induction? I always answer the same way - that depends on what you mean by better! Let me explain...

In the past, if you wanted the best performing cooktop, you wanted a pro-style cooktop, or rangetop as it is commonly referred to in the industry. There are many brands that offer high output burners which will also give you a delicate simmer. These rangetops make it possible to boil something quickly while never having to move the cooking vessel when it is time to turn the heat down to a simmer. (You may have seen the chocolate chips melting on a paper plate demonstration showing how delicate some rangetops can be.) Most brands offering high-end rangetops will give you an incredible simmer. My favorites are Wolf and Viking as every burner will give you the low simmer and high output.

Here is the drawback to gas cooktop - they are NOT easy to clean! I can't tell you how many people tell me about how they've scratched the porcelain or stainless steel on their cooking surface trying to scour it clean. And that's not to mention normal heat discoloration that is easily visible after regular use with stainless steel cooking surfaces. The grates are also hard to keep looking new. Grates should not be washed in the dishwasher as the rubber grommets will wash out. The grates will more than likely develop rust in the dishwasher, too.

This is where Induction cooktops spark the interest of my customers who want the performance of a professional rangetop, but want something easy to clean. Induction - or magnetic induction - works on the molecular level. The magnet creates friction in the cooking vessel (ferrous metal pots and pans are necessary - if a magnet sticks to it, you are good to go) creating the most efficient source of heat at more than 90 % efficiency. Gas cooktops are about 60 percent efficient, depending on the model. Back to the cleaning issue... Because there is no heat passing through the ceramic glass on the induction models, they are a breeze to clean. You don't have the usual burning in on the surface as you do with radiant smoothtop or gas cooktops. Soap and water usually does the trick to clean the induction top.

Induction is very fast to bring water to a boil, too. Depending on the electrical specs of the cooktop, you may be able to boil 1 quart of water in 30 seconds! The fastest gas rangetop will do the same in around 2 mins. 30 seconds. It will also go to a simmer instantly - great for when you've noticed the fudge starting to boil over!

So why wouldn't everyone choose induction over gas? Here are a couple things:

If you need a range (with oven), there aren't many to choose from right now with an induction top. Your choices currently are Viking and GE Profile.

Induction cooktops require more power. If you have a 30" cooktop presently, you more than likely have a 30 amp breaker. Most 30" induction cooktops will require a 40 amp service. You will more than likely need an electrician to make this work.

If you need to boil more than one vessel at a time, make sure to find out about power sharing on induction cooktops. Some cooktops will only be able to produce a boil on one burner while others are being used. This can be problem for large families or for those who hire caterers to cook for dinner parties, etc. Having said this, there are models available that you are able to boil more than one pot at a time. Make sure you know those models that can.

So which is better - gas or induction? That's up to you to decide. If you want high performance and easy cleaning, induction is a great choice. If you entertain and need to boil many pots at once, or even if you lose power often where you live (most gas cooktops can be lit manually with a match), gas may be the right one for you. The great thing about cooktops today is we have so many great choices to choose from in gas and induction.


Cooktops - Gas Vs Induction

Redis Commands Sale Pampers Swaddlers Sizes Buy Online

Monday, October 3, 2011

Hollywood, Smith and Grant, as they say farewell concert in greek w / Sam Botta LiveFearless.com Say

!8!# Promotional Couch Pillows

Friday, September 30, 2011

Wolf Range Match Salamander Broiler IRB36N-2

!±8±Wolf Range Match Salamander Broiler IRB36N-2

Brand : Wolf Range
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Oct 01, 2011 06:45:10
N/A



Any 60 in. Natural gas range

Shopping Casio Exilim S10

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Wolf oven - The best oven for your kitchen

!±8± Wolf oven - The best oven for your kitchen

If you bought an old house, you may need to do much renovation and redesign. You may also need some equipment worn with the new substitute. If the kitchen has an old oven, you just have to replace the furnace to operate as such can really uncomfortable. There are many types of furnaces on the market. However, you spent a lot of money to buy and renovate your home, so you need to find a great stove at an affordable price. The large oven can onlyWolf are in stock.

There are many types of wolf oven, you can choose. To decide which type of oven is best for you, you must first know your needs. If you only have a simple electric heater, you can create a range of wolves, because they all have a simple electric oven below. But if you have a big oven, do that many things may need, you should look at the list of built-in ovens Wolf.

There are 5 different models of Wolf ovens available. The models are the 30 "Single Oven - L Series, 30 "Double Oven - L Series, 30" Single Oven - E Series 30 "Double Oven - E Series 36" Single Oven - L Series First you must decide what size furnace you want to buy the wolf. You must also ensure that you have enough space in your kitchen.

If you think that you'll never need everything to cook in large quantities, only one series in the oven is probably appropriate for you. The 30 "Single Oven - E Series is available in two variants, the SO30-2F / S(Photography) and SO30-2U / S (unframed). This wolf in convention oven model is equipped with two fans, and may be about 10 modes of operation, how to bake, broil, grill, cook convection oven, convection, and others. Some modes may require additional accessories. This model is also touch-control panel with LCD display, dual internal halogen lighting, a large display area with double glazed windows, classic stainless steel finish and much more.

If you often cook food in large quantities at a time, you should choose a WolfDouble ovens. The 30 "Double Oven - L Series is the best model for you This model is available in two variants, framed and unframed Both ovens have two systems with two convection fans and four heating elements, which can be operated simultaneously or. . sequence. 10 modes can easily, even this model to choose from. The wolf in the furnace model has many features such as a rotation of the glass touch control panel, large display windows with triple-rangeTemperature sensor, halogen lights and much more. You can cook quickly with this model, because it reached only about 20 minutes at a temperature of 375 degrees in convection mode.

The purchase of a Wolf oven is something you will not regret it, because it has all the features that can help quickly and efficiently for the firing.


Wolf oven - The best oven for your kitchen

Good Dlp Lamps

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Because a large oven with hot air?

!±8± Because a large oven with hot air?

A large convection oven should be, because so many things that can offer will be selected. This device is a rich device. This is the reason why the device can do so many functions. It can act as a boiler, like an oven, a stove, a barbecue and other types of cooking that you wanted to meet.

Almost everyone wants to have a device that, when possible, a device that is very complete. Especially if the place is not so great in your kitchen much better if you have oneDevice that can do many things. This not only saves your money, but, as the space in your kitchen. Want to eat a roast chicken, and then you can roast your own, because this device is able to do so.

If you want to eat a cake, then you can bake your cake really, because you already have a device capable of making the cake. If you want to eat pasta, then you can also cook the pasta in this device, so this is all we have,Satisfaction. The device is also very easy to use. They still have to blow hot air and blow. All you have to do is, to light with a piezoelectric igniter.

Another point, is user-friendly device that can help cook quickly as possible without the real taste of the food you serve. Since then the device with a timer you can do everything else aside when cooking at the same time. So two things at once is what you have with this. Very easy toto use because all you have to do is set the timer, then other things. The temperature can also be set up to not much look like a coal-cooked food because the temperature can be adjusted. Foods with this device, such as roasting a chicken is cooked very well done. The whole chicken is evenly brown all sides and ensure that what angle you cooked the chicken is real.

Convection oven is a large oven, you will surely love to use. ButYou can not have regrets, then you must be really fed up with the choice of buying it would be prudent.


Because a large oven with hot air?

Saving Brother Hl2170w Onan Portable Generator Discount Best Buy Oakley Sideways

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Wolf Range Match Salamander Broiler RB36P-1

!±8±Wolf Range Match Salamander Broiler RB36P-1

Brand : Wolf Range
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Sep 16, 2011 06:00:08
N/A



Any 36 in. LP gas range

Used Atv Compare !8!# Protector Gun Safe Order

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Wolf C60SS-6B-24GB 60" Natural Gas Range with 6 Burners, 24" Griddle/Broiler and 2 Ovens

!±8± Wolf C60SS-6B-24GB 60" Natural Gas Range with 6 Burners, 24" Griddle/Broiler and 2 Ovens

Brand : General Electric | Rate : | Price :
Post Date : Sep 08, 2011 18:21:53 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days

The Challenger XL restaurant range series by Wolf Range has set the standard for rugged construction and reliable, consistent performance. Its hard-working, and easy-to-use features produce the high-quality results all restaurants have come to expet from Wolf Ranges, all this without breaking the budget. This range has been constructed using a fully MIG welded frame, meaning nothing in the frame has been screwed or bolted, making for a much more sturdy piece of equipment. Covering the range's frame are durable and easy to clean stainless steel front and sides, as well as a stainless steel backriser with a lift-off high shelf. Each open top burner comes with heavy-duty cast iron grates that are easily removed to ease sanitation.


  • Built To Last and Save On Energy Costs
  • Includes Free Shipping

Elliptical Trainer Precor Order Best Prices Tendercare Diaper !8!# Rototiller Parts Immediately

Monday, September 5, 2011

Max Burton 6000 1800-Watt Portable Induction Cooktop

!±8± Max Burton 6000 1800-Watt Portable Induction Cooktop

Brand : Max Burton | Rate : | Price : $61.99
Post Date : Sep 05, 2011 22:05:40 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days


  • 1800-watt portable single-burner induction cooktop heats instantly
  • 10 power levels; adjustable heat levels range from 140 to 450 degrees F
  • Cookware detection and overheat sensors prevent scorching and injury
  • 180-minute timer; push-button control panel with LED display
  • Measures approximately 14 by 12-3/5 by 2-1/2 inches

More Specification..!!

Max Burton 6000 1800-Watt Portable Induction Cooktop

Backpack Blowers Comparison Save Great Deals Bed Slats Twin !8!# Buyers Rebounders Exercise

Friday, September 2, 2011

Wolf C60SS-10 Natural Gas Range with 10 Burners and 2 Ovens

!±8±Wolf C60SS-10 Natural Gas Range with 10 Burners and 2 Ovens

Brand : Wolf
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Sep 02, 2011 11:46:11
Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Wolf's Challenger XL Commercial Restaurant Range sets the standard for rugged construction and reliable, consistent performance. This hard-working, easy-to-use range produces the high-quality results you expect, without breaking your budget. The range has a fully MIG welded aluminized steel frame for added durability. The range has ten 30,000 BTU/hr cast burners with lift-off burner heads. The burners' have an energy-saving flashtube open burner ignition system (one pilot for every two burners) shrouded for reliability. The range's heavy-duty cast grates can lift off easily for cleaning and have a built-in aeration bowl for greater efficiency. Burner knobs are cool to the touch, high temperature material. The range's oven thermostat adjusts from 250 F to 500 F with a low setting. The two ovens are 35,000 BTU/hr standard bakers depth ovens with a porcelain oven bottom and door panel. Oven doors are heavy duty with an integrated door hinge/spring mechanism requiring no adjustment. An extra-deep pull-out crumb tray with welded corners contain drip liquids.


Good Bargain Digital Stereo Recorder


Twitter Facebook Flickr RSS



Français Deutsch Italiano Português
Español 日本語 한국의 中国简体。







Sponsor Links