Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Headphone


Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Headphone
BOUNTY HUNTER HEADPHONES Bounty Headphones For use with Bounty Hunter(R) metal detectors ; True stereo headphones ; Individual volume controls for right and left sides; .25″ stereo plug compatible with all Bounty Hunter(R) models with .25″ headphone jacks Bounty Headphones

Customer Review: Not good for metal detecting !!
Bought a pair for use with my Bounty Hunter metal detector. On the plus side they are very comfortable and have good sound quality. The cord is a thin wire without coils. The volume control hangs up on everything it gets close to, including the detector. If the volume control was closer to the headphones and it had a sturdy coiled cord, it would be a great headphone. But as it is it is not worth the aggravation.

Customer Review: Order Cancelled without any explanation.
I ordered these in combination with a metal detector for Christmas and now that Christmas is here, the order cancelled without an explanation. I have no idea as to the quality of the headphones, but there appears to be a problem with supply and distribution which will make me look elsewhere!

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Garden Ruin
Never settling for one musical style, always searching for new ways to combine their jazz, desert-rock, Mariachi and dub influences, Tucson outfit Calexico have taken joyous quantum leaps, jumping from low-key, marmalade-coloured vignettes (their debut album Spoke) to more vivid palettes on LPs such as Hot Rail. Garden Ruins represents the band’s most populist statement yet. Assembled during and after their superlative collaboration with Iron & Wine (In The Reins) and a high profile tour with Wilco, the project connects with a wider musical picture–that of the classic American songbook.

The band avoid conjuring the busual Southwestern vistas in favour of more direct (and less exotic) styles like pop, rock and folk. It could have all been so terrible but in fact it’s one of the best decisions the band ever made: from the easy-going lope of “Lucky Dime” to the bombastic thrusts of “Letter To Bowie Knife” and “All Systems Red”, Garden Ruin is hugely palatable (not to mention surprisingly political), marking yet another zenith for Tucson’s most sonically nomadic sons. –Paul Sullivan
List Price: ?8.99
Amazon Price: ?8.48
Used Price: ?24.98
Customer Review: Calexico are dead, long live Calexico?
There is no doubt that this CD will appeal to a larger audience than its predecessors. As a frequent traveller to and enjoyer of the southern Arizona ambience, I have thoroughly enjoyed the Calexico kaleidoscope of sound. The CDs have been mixed in quality but have always boasted stunning highlights.This CD has enjoyed good reviews but I cannot find one truly outstanding and memorable track. It is a pleasant but palid development of their soundscape with all the quirky nuances mixed well down. Few will dislike it, to be sure, but what a loss!
Customer Review: Where Has All The Music Gone???
Contrary to what is written in the ‘Description’ piece above, this CD will NOT please all of Calexico’s fans, and it certainly does not do anything for me! There is a noticeable absence of Calexico’s customary musicality and far too much singing. In fact there is not one interesting instrumental piece in the whole CD and the lifeless vocals quickly begin to drag. It’s sad but true that this is several steps behind any other Calexico CD and has almost no appeal.

Draper Carbon Steel Garden Rake
Twelve tooth head with epoxy coated finish. head securely fixed to tubular steel handle. with black plastic hand grip with hang hole. sold loose. Weight: 1.24kg.

The Goodies - The Complete LWT Series
List Price: ?24.99
Amazon Price: ?7.97
Used Price: ?8.00
Customer Review: THE ‘GOODS’ DELIVER….
This is the only official complete series of the ‘GOODIES’,and contains the usual mixed bag of out-and-out gems, with one or two reheated themes……..overall, the standard is high enough to warrant purchase; picture/sound quality is fine, gag-quota is high, with many elaborate visual stunts of which this team is celebrated. One episode: ‘HOLIDAY’ –is studio-only, which affords textured interplay within the team. Apparantly, this series of 7 25-min shows reportedly cost as much as the entire BBC output of 70 shows…..GO FIGURE! VISUALLY impressive as ever, with only token ITV ‘forced laughter’ from the studio audience. This show translates to the commercial channel far better than other COMEDY exports. —-FINE.
Customer Review: Yum Yum (but only one turkey)
This is the third collection of Goodies episodes from Network, the others being ‘At Last’ and ‘At last A Second Helping’. The ‘Robot’ and ‘Bigfoot’ episodes are certainly as good as much of their output at the BBC. Confining this collection to the LWT series however has resulted in a considerably shorter programme (175 mins as opposed to 255 and 240 minutes). The additional features are all on the second disk, and are a mixed bag. The Goodies Music Performance Archive gives us live performances of five of their songs, including ‘Funky Gibbon’, a feature noticeably absent (with one exception) from the earlier collections. There is also an interview archive and, bizarrely some amateur footage of Tim judging a Turkey competition! (This last item comes into the catagory of being so bad it’s good. Nevertheless you won’t want to watch it more than once.)The disc also features complete episodes of ‘From the Top’ and ‘Doctor In The House’. Both featuring input from one of the Goodies, but Graeme’s appearance in the latter is so brief that if you blink you’ll miss it. Incidentally, those people who think that ‘The Goodies’ is dated should watch this episode of ‘Doctor In The House’ to see what the word really means! As with the previous collections this comes complete with an informative 28 page booklet. The previous collections however had been digitally restored; this one hasn’t and, although the quality is not that bad, it does show. There are still about 40 or so episodes from the BBC years still to be released on DVD, including the whole of series’ 3 and 6. While we wait however, this collection is a welcome addition to the series.

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