SKU: 35819818876

ROUGH COUNTRY 20-INCH CREE LED LIGHT BAR - (SINGLE ROW | BLACK SERIES W/ COOL WHITE DRL)

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Description

ROUGH COUNTRY 20-INCH CREE LED LIGHT BAR - (SINGLE ROW | BLACK SERIES W/ COOL WHITE DRL)FREE SHIPPING IN LOWER 48 STATES OVERVIEW Command the Dark: Stay out later on the trails with Rough Country's sleek 20 inch Single Row CREE LED Light Bar. These sleek, single row light bars offer enormous lighting power in a stylish, modern frame. Includes a set of end mounts and adjustable base mounts, providing you with multiple options to mount your light wherever you need to with full adjustability. With a powerful 7,200 Lumens and 100 Watt

FREE SHIPPING IN LOWER 48 STATES

OVERVIEW

Command the Dark: Stay out later on the trails with Rough Country's sleek 20-inch Single Row CREE LED Light Bar. These sleek, single-row light bars offer enormous lighting power in a stylish, modern frame. Includes a set of end mounts and adjustable base mounts, providing you with multiple options to mount your light wherever you need to with full adjustability. With a powerful 7,200 Lumens and 100 Watt output, this LED light is a sight to behold. Rough Country's DRL Light Bars feature a section LEDs designed to illuminate similar to the daytime running light option of modern headlights. This line of LED backlighting gives your vehicle increased visibility and an interesting look.

The black panel design offers jaw-dropping good looks that blend perfectly with any vehicle using black accents like grilles, wheels, bull bars or steps! These all-weather lights feature a durable, die-cast aluminum housing and include a premium, waterproof, flat-wound, braided wiring harness with toggle switch and in-line fuse. Includes a snap on cover and Rough Country’s 3-year Warranty.

FEATURES

  • 7200 lumens
  • 100 watts
  • Contains 20, 5 watt High Intensity CREE LEDs
  • Contains 10, cool white daytime running LEDs
  • 30 degree spot beam
  • Black panel design
  • IP67 Waterproof rating
  • Durable die cast aluminum housing
  • Moisture Breather technology reduces moisture build-up behind the lends
  • Includes premium, flat-wound wiring harness with three-way switch
  • Includes snap-on cover
  • Features both end mounts and adjustable base mounts for multiple mounting solutions
  • 3 year warranty

NOTES - IMPORTANT

More Information
SKU 70720BLDRL
Light Series Black Series w/ White DRL
Beam Type Spot
Est. Install Time 1-2 hours

 

PARTS
  • 20-inch LED Light Bar
  • Wiring harness
  • Three-position switch
  • Snap-on cover
  • Hardware

     

    DM/5-8-24

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    SKU: 35819818876

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    4.7 ★★★★★
    Based on 809 reviews
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    WellBCare
    Lowell, US
    ★★★★★ 2
    Be clear that it's a blank journal you create, with brief quotes and thumbnail art
    Format: Paperback
    If one is looking for a personal journal of empty lined pages ~ and a brief Lilias Trotter quote with a thumbnail-size photo of her art on each page then this is for you. I understood it was a book of her journalling with more viewable-size sketches.
    WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
    Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2022
    E
    Verified Purchase
    Eric Balkan
    Lake Worth, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    When and where economics went wrong
    Format: Paperback
    This is one of those books that can provide an epiphany to the reader -- but not very many American readers have even heard of it, unfortunately. That could be due to it's being a book primarily about English economic history, with assumptions that the reader is familiar to some extent with things like the Poor Laws and Tory socialism. But I wasn't, and was still able to glean some great insights from the work. That could be because Polanyi is not afraid of repetition. :-) A key insight, and the one that could be summed up as the theme of the book, is Polanyi's realization that prior to about 1830, the market and the economy were considered part of society. That is, economic activity was something that people did along with everything else they did, like engage in social/familial relationships, religious rituals, etc. But with the 1830s came a paradigm shift: the advent of rational capitalism. Now, the market was considered an entity by itself, outside of society. This market entity was viewed as governed by universal laws. Like laws of physics, these market laws were independent of culture, independent of social group, independent of time period, and, in fact, independent of human behavior. While any observer of human nature would say that people often make decisions for emotional reasons -- and modern neurological research shows that virtually every decision we make is a combination of the rational and the emotional -- these market laws assumed only rational behavior on the part of economic actors. Though Polanyi doesn't mention it, it's now easy to see how Alfred Marshall could get carried away with creating a mathematical foundation for microeconomics and how Leon Walras could, reportedly, say that if something couldn't be studied mathematically, it wasn't worth studying. There's no current way to model emotions with math, and so the Ricardian prototype of an emotion-less economics continues into the modern economics of today. These universal market laws frees the market from any social constraints. A number of modern neo-classical economists assert that this makes economics purely amoral, i.e., without regard for any ethics. Therefore any attempts by the public, by politicians, or by workers to add ethics to the market is an interference with pure market workings, which, according to their interpretation of Adam Smith's "invisible hand", will produce optimal results if just left alone. But Smith never said that, and in fact rational capitalism, in elevating greed and selfishness to the status of goals -- see the Ayn Rand work "The Virtue Of Selfishness" -- is, IMO, not amoral at all, but rather is a morality of its own. Anyway, back to Polanyi's insights. Another key one is the concept of a "double movement" in 19th century England. Each move to create a purer market created an ad-hoc counter move. E.g., Ricardian free trade was faced with opposition from workers losing their jobs and local firms losing business Americans can easily think of another example: where the employment of children (eventually) led to laws restricting that employment, simply because human beings have too much of a sympathetic nature to sit still for children losing limbs in the dangerous factories and mines of the time. Polanyi notes that capitalists often blame these anti-capitalist laws on planned activity by socialist anti-market groups, but he says they're actually the result of the recognition by the general public that they don't want to live under a pure market system. Yet another good insight is Polanyi's recognition that market laws treat labor, land, and money as commodities. We can see that today, where neo-classical economists assert that the law of supply and demand should apply to workers as it applies to anything else in the economy. That is, if there's a surplus of workers in one area and a shortage in another, supply and demand dictates the flow of workers from the one area to the other. But a laid-off textile worker in South Carolina is not going to move to China for a job. That's my own example, but Polanyi offers his own from modern English history. The book isn't perfect. Polanyi does have a tendency to generalize, a common failing among authors, IMO. E.g., in discussing the rise of fascism in the 1930s, he's on very shaky ground when he starts talking about the US or about Russian policy intentions during that period. I gave The Great Transformation 5 stars because, even with its faults, the reader will be thinking about Polanyi's insights for some time to come. I am.
    WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
    Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2009
    K
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    Kindle Customer
    Belleville, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    Not light reading but worth it
    Format: Kindle
    Much of this book was heavy reading for me, mainly due my not being familiar with the background development and history of various economic theory and associated laws over 500 or so years of British history. I did stick it out and am glad I did. There are many insights as to how we have arrived at today and the book is still relevant even though it was written in 1942. I found the last few chapters and the comments in Sources to offer the most explanations to fit modern times especially with regard to the rise of fascism. Thick but worth it.
    WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
    Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2025
    B
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    Blake West
    Fort Morgan, US
    ★★★★★ 4
    Interesting anthropology and critique, but dense and obtuse writing
    Format: Kindle
    The good part is that at the end of the day, I learned a lot here, and Polanyi raised a lot of very interesting and under-discussed historical points to create his argument. It felt very similar to David Graeber (or I guess Graeber is similar to Polanyi) in that way. The bad part is that, whereas Graeber writes with exceptional clarity and vividness, Polanyi is obtuse and dense. And I've read other books from this era, I don't think it's the time. I think it's Polanyi's writing. Beyond that, his work serves more as analysis than prescription. It's a bit unclear exactly what he's advocating for. Which maybe is OK, though I prefer when non fiction writers offer solutions rather than just pointing out problems. All in all, if you can settle in with his writing, there are definite gems in there.
    WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
    Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2026
    K
    Verified Purchase
    Kitty Bryant
    San Leandro, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    Inspiring analysis of economic history
    Format: Paperback
    Polanyi presents economic history through an analysis of the "utopian" catastrophy of the self-regulating market economy. Polanyi argues that the free market economy treats the most essential elements of human society - labor, nature, and money - as if they should be exploited like commodities. When liberalism (free marketeerism) rules, then the economy dictates what is possible in human society, and these rules are intolerable because they create conditions under which humans are impoverished and disempowered. In his final chapter he lays out the battle ground between liberalism and its alternatives, which when he was writing (1945) were socialism and fascism. Fascism refuses the dictates of economic liberalism but substitutes in its place the dictates of a state that denies individual freedom. Socialism, alternatively, holds the only promise of true freedom for the individual where economic and political rules are developed and enforced democratically for the protection of society. While this is not an easy read because it demands a background in history, he is a fluent and persuasive writer.
    WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
    Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2023

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