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Steccone Handle Magi-Clip Aluminum Steccone

Quick Overview

  • 50 - 60% lighter than brass and stainless steel handles
  • Features aircraft exlastic stop nuts that will not work loose
  • Standard Nut and Screw attach or Magi Klip Quick Release
  • Made in the same tradition of quality as their brass and stainless steel handles except half the weight
  • Magi-Clip Version offers Easy Push Springback Release

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Item #: 01-6M

$10.25 - $14.05

Channel Attachment Selection

Channel Attachment:
 
 
2 options available.
This is an obsolete Item

Steccone Handle

Available in the standard nut and bolt attachment or the world’s first single-point, quick-release squeeze handle.

Magi-Klip... Designed and patented in 1953, replacing the rubber or repositioning the channel has never been so easy. Simply depress the Magi-Klip and then release it for a firm hold on the channel and rubber. Equipped with nylon style nuts that will not work loose.

Available in Two Styles 

Standard Attach

Nylon Lock Nuts and Screws attach and hold the channel

Magi-Klip Quick Release 

Nylon Screws hold the Magi-Klip Backplate in place

Proposition 65 requires businesses to provide warnings to Californians about significant exposures to chemicals that cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm.  These chemicals can be in the products that Californians purchase, in their homes or workplaces, or that are released into the environment. By requiring that this information be provided, Proposition 65 enables Californians to make informed decisions about their exposures to these chemicals. Proposition 65 also prohibits California businesses from knowingly discharging significant amounts of listed chemicals into sources of drinking water. Proposition 65 requires California to publish a list of chemicals known to cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm. This list, which must be updated at least once a year, has grown to include approximately 900 chemicals since it was first published in 1987. Proposition 65 became law in November 1986, when California voters approved it by a 63-37 percent margin.  The official name of Proposition 65 is the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986.

The list of chemicals contains a wide range of naturally occurring and synthetic chemicals that include additives or ingredients in pesticides, common household products, food, drugs, dyes, or solvents. Listed chemicals may also be used in manufacturing and construction, or they may be byproducts of chemical processes, such as motor vehicle exhaust.  For more information visit www.p65warnings.ca.gov/