SKU: 39705726016

Land Rover Defender - Detachable Tow Bar Kit - 130, Air Suspension, Noble Chrome Tow Eye Cover

Sale price$740.23 Regular price$822.48
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Description

Land Rover Defender - Detachable Tow Bar Kit - 130, Air Suspension, Noble Chrome Tow Eye CoverConvenient and easy to use, the detachable tow bar ensures a clean look when not in use. Supplied with 50mm detachable tow ball which can be stored under the loadspace floor in a dedicated location when not in use. Maximum towing capacity 3,000kg and 200kg nose load. 13 pin towing electrics are included. Kit includes detachable tow bar, TRM module, TBM3 TRM bracket, four M6 nuts, harness, tow eye cover and detachable swan neck. Available on 130 only.

Convenient and easy to use, the detachable tow bar ensures a clean look when not in use. Supplied with 50mm detachable tow ball which can be stored under the loadspace floor in a dedicated location when not in use. Maximum towing capacity 3,000kg and 200kg nose load. 13 pin towing electrics are included. Kit includes detachable tow bar, TRM module, TBM3/TRM bracket, four M6 nuts, harness, tow eye cover and detachable swan neck. Available on 130 only. For vehicles fitted with air suspension. Kit supplied with Noble Chrome tow eye cover. Towing electrics are capable of powering caravans, trailers or lighting boards including those fitted with rear mounted LED lamp kits. However there is a minimum current required which some auxiliary lighting may not support. Please refer to the Owner's Handbook for details of the minimum and maximum electrical loading supported.

Fits:
Land Rover Defender


Fitting from £539.40.

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SKU: 39705726016

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Kyle
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
From Pixels to Problems! Great read!
Format: Hardcover
“Play Nice” offers an enjoyable deep dive into the tumultuous history of Blizzard Entertainment, chronicling its journey from a ragtag group of brilliant college students to its evolution under corporate ownership and its current state. Schreier provides fascinating insights into the antics of Blizzard’s early employees, showcasing their outlandish attitudes, relentless work ethic, and tight-knit camaraderie. The book explores how Blizzard transitioned from a company renowned for producing high-quality, polished games that left competitors in the dust to one struggling to preserve its heart and soul amid mounting corporate pressures. While the corporate side and C-suite executives are often cast in a negative light, Schreier thoughtfully examines the motivations behind their decisions, offering perspectives from all levels of the company—from executives and middle management to QA testers. This balanced approach provides a refreshing take, avoiding oversimplified blame and instead considering multiple sides of the story. And while it’s easy to villainize the suits in the boardroom, Schreier does a great job showing why some decisions were made. From executives to QA testers, he pulls back the curtain to reveal a mess of perspectives, reminding us that every bad decision has some kind of reason behind it (even if it’s still a bad decision). The book also revisits the scandals that put some serious smudges on Blizzard’s reputation, offering new angles and fresh commentary. As someone who once lived for Blizzard games—cheering at Overwatch League matches and losing entire weekends to Diablo marathons—I can’t help but root for Blizzard to find its way back to glory. And hey, if it means waiting another decade for their next masterpiece, so be it. It’s done when it’s done.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025
H
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Heather R. hayton
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Reads like your favorite succession episodes
Format: Hardcover
Great book—thoroughly researched and delightfully written! Highly recommend to all my gamers and friends from that era.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2025
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Felipe
Boise, US
★★★★★ 4
Great insight into an otherwise obscure world
Format: Hardcover
As someone who grew up playing blizzard's games for an unfathomable amount of hours I've always been interested into their inner workings, especially considering their downfall in recent years. This book holds a ton of information and knowledge, is well sourced, and is the work of someone with obvious deep familiarity with the industry and its particularities. Besides the information itself, the book it written in fun and interesting prose, and it keeps the rhythm fast and entertaining, so it reads more like a novel than a journalistic article. Overall, an entertaining piece of insight into a world that is normally quite unknown, even to long time gamers like myself.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2026
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alex schopf
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read
Format: Hardcover
Extremely interesting book
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Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2026
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Nazih Fares
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 3
Great insight on what happened at Blizzard but...
Format: Kindle
My main issue with the book is the lack of non-american stories that explained the bigger picture. As a former Blizzard dev, there's much more than what happened in Irvine and Korea, with Europe's office mentioned almost as a footnote, and nothing else from the other regional stories. Shame but I guess the book would've been double the size.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2025

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