http://pharmacyresident.org/w/www.rainforestherbs.com.html
Rainforest Herbs – Rainforest Herbs – the worlds leading brand for Tongkat Ali extract capsules, Virgin Coconut Oil and much more. - Since 1995 we have been involved in the R&D of professional herbal products from the Southeast Asian rainforest and sold in all major retail pharmacies in Malaysia
Country: 103.8.25.132, Asia, MY
City: 112.5 , Malaysia
This product definitely stopped the leak in the power steering line that I had in my 2001 Nissan Maxima Se. I tried the generic stuff and Barr's best product (most expensive) and Lucas definitely worked the best.
Fantastic LED grow light, Yes it is 5w, but if placed high enough above canopy it wont burn leaves, and the canopy penetration is incredible. I have a 300w lightimetunnel that i love and is my main grow lamp, and a 300w galaxy hydro, but i realized i needed more canopy penetration if i wanted to increase my tomatoes yield. So i knew i needed 5w, and this lamp sits nicely between my two 300w, and its not nearly as hot as i expected, and a thousand times brighter than my 300w. Beware it does have more white than blue or red LEDs, so make sure you have at least a red supplemental LED for flowering. I recommend supplemental LEDs anyway. But other than that i've seen explosive growth in just 4-5 days. Love the light. Keep it up VIPAR
I have had this product for a couple of weeks now, but I have only used it two or three times because of the scent! The scent is REALLY strong. At first it smells a lot like sugary grape bubble gum. Eventually, it develops into something like a Jolly Rancher Apple and Watermelon combo. My husband said it smells of fruity pebbles breakfast cereal. It is not that it smells bad exactly, but it the strongest smelling hair product I have ever used-- and it doesn't fade much. I cannot wear perfume with it, and that is a deal breaker for me, personally.
This does have a lot of useful stuff, but as a whole, I am not sure you are better off paying for this than you are searching the internet. So far I haven't found anything in the book that wasn't easier to find and free online. It also tends to be a bit overly simplistic. For example, this particular car is known for needing the thermostat replaced after about 60k miles. Haynes says: pull the hoses, remove the three bolts, reverse the process to reinstall. The problem is that in this car you need to pull the power steering pump first, which means removing the serpentine belt, which means you need to pull the wheel to access the tensioner. The book makes no mention of the that, but every set of instructions I found online did.