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- lou_0925 (432)- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseGreat buyer. Very prompt payment
- saturdaymorningpickers (127)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseGood Buyer -- Did everything they were suppose to
- pcw.inc (72142)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
- 5***t (234)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseItem as described. Fast shipping. Great seller!!
- sidethings (4684)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- liam-plumbing (14668)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (6)

Feb 23, 2018
Excellent picture, many features
1 of 1 found this helpful The OLED televisions are highly rated for picture quality, and the LG OLED line is considered the most economical buy in this category. Indeed, the picture is superlative. The blacks on this television are, well, absolutely black, unlike LCD or LED, and certainly (gasp, I'm showing my age) CRT, televisions. In some ways, it can be startling.
This TV is rife with features, including a plethora of "video apps" (Hulu, YouTube, Amazon, Netflix, etc.), an essentially full featured web browser, Android and Windows screen mirroring, and a USB video file player (with fast and slow forward, and fast reverse). It can display two video sources simultaneously in a split screen view, but (a) there is only one tuner, and (b) if you are using an AV receiver for sound, you might fight a bit to get seamless sound switching with split screen (but that is a very esoteric and minor point).
There are also a great number of picture adjustments -- I am working on figuring out all the intricacies (e.g., what's the difference between OLED background brightness, and brightness?).
So, all in all, this has been a great upgrade from my former TV, a 40 inch LG 1080p LCD now over 10 years old. I recommend it without hesitation.

Sep 17, 2016
Broan / Nutone replacement parts are no bargain, but glad to have them.
This fan assembly fit in perfectly, replacing the original in a Nutone "QT9093BR QuieTTest Heat-A-Ventlite". It restored normal, relatively quiet operation.
These fans fail after a number of years, when the motor shaft hole in the plastic fan enlarges. The motor shaft then only partially engages the fan, resulting in lower speed and a lot of noise and vibration.
The replacement is overpriced, well marked up by Broan / Nutone I am sure. Nonetheless, it is much cheaper than replacing the entire multifunction unit. I did repair another such assembly by replacing only the motor. (Yes, it was the fan that failed, but the replacement motor has a longer shaft, allowing installation of a bushing to grab the fan.) However, Grainger recently marked up the replacement motor from about $30 to $55, so it wasn't worth the trouble on this go.

May 31, 2016
Powerful, mostly convenient crimp tool
2 of 2 found this helpful This tool uses the same leverage principle that locking pliers ("Vise Grip", "Mole Grip") use to increase force. It makes it easy to squeeze down on crimp connectors to make a good contact. The tool appears rugged; I cannot see any reason it would not last a long time even under heavy use.
The jaw set having the red, blue, and yellow dots is for what may be the most common connector: insulated terminals accepting # 22 - 10 AWG wire. (By the way, guess I'm crimp-connector-challenged, but it took me a while to figure out that the side of those jaws that embosses dots is the real business side -- the portion of the crimp holding the stripped wire should be placed under that area.)
Two minuses:
(1) No instructions provided. It would be nice to have good illustrations of the exact type of crimp each set of jaws was designed for.
(2) Changing jaw dies is inconvenient -- you must use a screwdriver such as the provided one to loosen and tighten the dies. Now, there are crimp tools that have a fast change jaw design, but they are twice as expensive.
Another point. Most people feel that electrical crimp connectors should be used for stranded wire only. I have tried solid wire and found it challenging to make a tight crimp. This is not because the tool cannot apply enough force, but rather because the geometry of the tool's crimp slot is in fact designed for stranded wire, where the stranded bunch can spread out a bit as the crimp is tightened around it. I have found some squarer shaped crimp slots (in the jaws supplied with this tool) can force the crimp to take a more rounded shape as force is applied, without needing to apply so much force that the solid conductor is damaged or appreciably flattened. This does result in a very tight crimp.