SKU: 99026099273

P2839-12930K9 1-35W LED LINEAR VANITY

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Description

P2839-12930K9 1-35W LED LINEAR VANITYFinish Architectural Bronze Option Dry Rated, Energy Efficient, Prop 65 Glass Etched White Category Bath & Vanity Style Modern; Urban Industrial Family Truss LED Voltage 120 Number Of Bulbs 1 Backplate Height(in) 4. 75 Backplate Width(in) 6. 75 Bulb Hours 42000 Bulb Type LED Canopy rectangle Depth 3. 88 Diameter 22. 5 Extension 3. 875 Height To Center of Outlet(in) 2. 37 Introduction Date 2016 06 01 Kelvin 3000 Lumens Light Output 1433 Material steel

Finish Architectural Bronze
Option Dry Rated, Energy Efficient, Prop 65
Glass Etched White
Category Bath & Vanity
Style Modern;Urban Industrial
Family Truss LED
Voltage 120
Number Of Bulbs 1
Backplate Height(in) 4.75
Backplate Width(in) 6.75
Bulb Hours 42000
Bulb Type LED
Canopy rectangle
Depth 3.88
Diameter 22.5
Extension 3.875
Height To Center of Outlet(in) 2.37
Introduction Date 2016-06-01
Kelvin 3000
Lumens / Light Output 1433
Material steel
Ship Carton Height(in) 10.75
Ship Carton Length(in) 26.37
Ship Carton Width(in) 7.75
Ship Weight(lbs) 5.81
Vendor Ship Method UPS
Warranty 5-Year Limited Warranty
Weight(lbs) 2.7
Wire Included 6
Americans with Disabilities Act Yes
Backplate Depth 0.6875
Can be Mounted Up or Down Yes
Canopy Shape Rectangle
Color Generic Brown
Construction Material Construction
Country Of Origin China
CRI 93
Dark Sky No
Design Series No
Dimming Compatability Lutron Diva DVELV-300P;Lutron Nova T NTELV-300;Lutron Diva DVELV-300P;Luton Caseta;Lutron Ariadni AY-600P;Leviton Illumatech IPI06-1LZ;Lutron Lumea LG-603PG;Leviton SureSlide 6672;Leviton SureSlide 6674;Lutron Ariadni AYCL-153P;Lutron Skylark Contour CTCL
Dimming Protocol ELV/Reverse Phase
Dimming Range 10%
Dry Rated Yes
Energy Star No
Finish Type Painted
Frequency Rating 60
Glass Shape Diffuser
Grounded Convenience Outlet included No
Height to Center(in) 2.38
JA8 No
Lamp Type Basic Solid State
Lens Shade Material Glass
Long Description Tubular design pairs with a geometric back plate and mesh accents.;Can be mounted horizontally or vertically.;Circular etched opal glass contains an integrated LED source.;Dimmable to 10% with many ELV dimmers;1443 lumens 38 lumens/watt (delivered);3000K
Lumen per Watt 38.7
Mount Location Wall
MTO No
Non UPS Shippable No
Operating Temprature 30 °C
Post Top Fits Standard No
Proposition 65 Cancer Yes
Proposition 65 Reproductive Harm Yes
Proposition 65 Warning Required? Yes
Room Type Bathroom
Safety Rating cETLus
Short Description LED Linear Vanity
Showroom Yes
Socket Base Type LED
Starting Temperature - Minimum -30 °C
Sub Brand Progress LED
Title 24 No
Weight of Fixture Exceeds NEC Limits(lbs) No
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SKU: 99026099273

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4.1 ★★★★★
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Z
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Zachary Cochran
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Gives an actual answer—without feeling cliché. Terrific book.
How People Change is a powerful book. It spells out in simple (not simplistic) terms how people change. It looks at Scripture and quotes from it heavily to make its points. At the center of the process of change is Jesus and the gospel. When we accept what Jesus has done for us and look at him, and continue to look at him throughout our lives instead of just at the moment of our conversion, something monumental shifts. But the shift is so subtle, but so real. I feel like I understand what life with Christ is supposed to look like now. A lot of books promise to give you the secrets to this or that. This book does give you the answer to how people change: it involves repentance no matter life's circumstances PLUS faith in who God is and living out of our new identity as his children. This is one of those books I plan to buy and give to my friends. I want more people to read this to understand what I now understand. This is truly a five star book. It's not a quick read, but wow is it worth it. If you don't read any other book this year, seriously, consider this one. In fact, go ahead, check out the sample of the book right now—if you don't end up buying and reading it, you will be missing out on grace from God in a big way.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2015
D
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david h.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
recommend this seller
Format: Paperback
great product, great seller
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2026
F
Verified Purchase
fitzalling
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Globalization greatly increases leverage over opponents
I'm trying to learn more about China. This book was referenced in a book I read by U.S. General Spalding entitled "War Without Rules." The book was written by two Chinese PLA colonels and published in 1999 so it's about a quarter century old. According to General Spalding the book has been read and considered within the U.S. military. I have the paperback and it's 193 pages, not including a short afterword and some information on the authors' backgrounds. It reads fairly well although I did encounter a few places where I wasn't entirely sure what the book was trying to say. I don't know if this was due to translation challenges or it was just me. I got through the book fairly quickly. My main takeaway was that globalization has offers a potential opponent many more levers to influence the actions of others than simply resorting to kinetic (bombs and bullets) warfare. Economic warfare is certainly possible and in the colonels' view has been resorted to by the West against Asian targets. They view George Soros as a financial terrorist who wreaked havoc on Asian economies in 1998. They describe Soros as a soldier in the wars of tomorrow. Page 191. The inspiration for the book was the First Gulf War. The lesson that the colonels drew from this war was that it was inadvisable to fight the U.S. in a straight-up kinetic war. Finding other ways to fight the U.S. was mandatory. As I write this in January 2024 I wonder if the Chinese military will follow the colonels or if they will resort to traditional kinetic means of fighting if their leadership decides to take Taiwan. On page 120 they describe the new model of warfare as combining the battlefield and non-battlefield exemplified by Schwarzkopf and Soros and Bin Laden and some Chinese that I don't recognize. As they say on page 120 "This then is our real hand of cards." The book also cites a number of Chinese theorists on war, which I think I useful. I've read fairly widely, but my reading has been focused in the West. Also, the authors look at international bodies and how China might use them against the U.S. On page 164 the book argues that warfare is changing from "bloody massacre" and finding expression in "information warfare, financial warfare, and trade warfare". Look at the U.S. response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The colonels' thoughts are worthy of consideration. On page 110 the book observes "continuous coverage by the modern media which very much strengthens the effects of terrorism." If the topic interests you, I recommend the book. The book may be 25 years old, but its message is timely.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2024
A
Verified Purchase
Albert
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Intriguing Challenges and Overblown Rhetoric
This is a useful book to read. The principles of warfare advocated by Sun Tzu say that you must know both yourself and your enemy. This book shows that modern American society is known by the Chinese military. As an exercise in cultural self-understanding alone, reading it pays dividends. However, the topic is strategy. The words used can be relatively confusing at times, not quite embodying the meaning given to them by the authors. Unlimited...but within limits. Unrestricted...but following rules. It can be a bit of a struggle to follow their train of thought and understand their meaning (especially with the writing style, which lacks clarity or organization). Despite this I think it is worth struggling with, and especially with a broad overview of some of the argument to assist. Such a board overview follows. The main point: the United States is prone to think in a manner which intrinsically restricts the conduct of warfare to only a formal military domain; thus it abstracts military action from its location in social domains (politics, economy, information, etc). This fits rather well. We like things to be formulas or mechanistic. We also like to abstract them away into separate ("rigidly distinct") boxes which have no interaction. And so, the military is responsible for military problems and better stay far from anything approaching politics! However, as the authors reveal, this leads to an inability to conduct grander strategy in warfare. So instead: "unrestricted" warfare is to have strategy incorporate considerations (and interactions) within various domains, not only the military domain. Basically it is a rejection of the post-Westphalian concept of the nation-state as the supreme (and exclusive) kind of agent in strategy. This is good. The post-Westphalian idea of the nation-state may be useful in certain contexts and for certain purposes, but it is NOT the comprehensive reality of the universe. To treat it as such is to be blind to much of reality, and to live in a fantasy world. Does North Korea really care that it is "unrecognized" as a nation by us? Nope. Because the nation-state idea simply doesn't describe the order in which NK exists, so much as it describes the order in which Germany exists. This is all well and good. But is it truly revolutionary or new? I don't think so. Clausewitz himself writes that there is no military situation abstracted from the political situation, and politics (in this sense) involves much more than just inter-governmental relations. Rather, I think that we can treat this as a corrective against modern American oversimplifications and reductions, and thus as a "return" to older concepts of strategy and statesmanship. Indeed, they even imitate and follow Clausewitz's guidance on method for determining a theory of warfare which is inductive/a posteriori, rather than deductive/a priori. Unfortunately, the one "modern" example of a war they have to analyze is the Gulf War, and so they relentlessly analyze it alone, perhaps leading to imbalance. And here is where the rhetoric is overblown. This is no "master plan" to destroy America (false advertising). It's not even really new concepts. Rather, it is a (very) forceful reminder against the false (and harmful) modernist sentiments that prevail in America's mode of conducting warfare. In reference to false understandings, the authors actually accuse Americans of "touching the elephant" - an allusion to the tale of "blind men and the elephant" (although this allusion is not made clear in the text, and so is confusing if you have not heard of the tale). It is a parable about believing one has the absolute truth, while only having a limited perspective. Perhaps the authors also touch the elephant in a few ways (bias for helicopters without empirical evidence, a near-religious adoration of the golden ratio, etc.). There's a final point of balance that is perhaps needed. It is easy to either dismiss the Chinese critiques of American society ("we don't worship tech") or take them too seriously ("tech is evil"). Either reaction is problematic. Instead we need to understand that just as in some other areas, there is a rhetorical/political purpose at play. America is being made fun of (which means that the critiques are both based in reality, but also somewhat biased for the sake of local humor). Technology is not evil, and technology is not God. So we need to learn to avoid seeing technological advancement as a replacement for people (this is the error the authors would like to point out). This doesn't mean avoiding technological advancement. There are many lessons to be learned from this book. I'd advise it for all military officers to read. However, I also would advise to temper the expectations and reframe the reader's conception of what the book is: it is an exercise in recovery of some older strategic concepts, not a revolutionary approach to destroying the United States. Get past and ignore the rhetoric and advertising, and take the lessons where they make valid points about where we can be short-sighted in our mindset. But don't discount those lessons because of the wild rhetoric and advertising which surround them. Doing this, you will profit.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2022
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Verified Purchase
CliffB
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
China’s Global Strategic Approach.
Provides an excellent understanding of China’s strategy approach — which should be occurs by now, but isn’t. Its style is probably to Asian to be appreciated by most Americans — who have never studied the classic Asian way of war — and never been to war in Asia. If interested in this subject, start with Sun Tzu, and try to think like about strategy the way the Chinese understand it.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2026

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