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  2. Bicycle handlebar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_handlebar

    Flat bars are the standard handlebars equipped on mountain bikes, hybrids, and recently on fixed-gear bicycles and flat bar road bikes. A flat bar is a nearly-straight tube, in most cases slightly bent toward the rider. Many penny-farthings and early safety bicycles had flat handlebars.

  3. Flat bar road bike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_bar_road_bike

    The drivetrain of a flat bar bike often borrows features from multiple bike styles, pairing the trigger-shifting approach of mountain bikes with the taller cassette ratios of road bikes. The brakes of purpose-built flat-bar designs tend to be linear-pull, a mechanism nonexistent in road bikes and largely displaced by discs with mountain bikes.

  4. Digging bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digging_bar

    Wedge — an unsharpened blade for digging, breaking and prying. A San Angelo bar has a wedge at one end. Chisel — a sharpened blade for cutting roots, digging and prying. A pinch point bar has a chisel at one end. Bars are typically 5 to 6 ft (1.5 to 1.8 m) long and weigh 15 to 23 lb (6.8 to 10.4 kg).

  5. Bar stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_stock

    A bar is characterised by an "enclosed invariant convex cross-section", meaning that pipes, angle stock and objects with varying diameter are not considered bar stock. Bar stock is commonly processed by a sequence of sawing , turning , milling , drilling and grinding to produce a final product, often vastly different from the original stock.

  6. Stretcher bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretcher_bar

    Stretcher bars are also used in picture framing when framers are framing things like sport shirts etc. Stretcher bars are used extensively in theatrical productions for framing material backdrops. When a photographer takes a picture then digitally transfers this onto a canvas via inkjet printing, he then stretches this over a stretcher frame.

  7. Halligan bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halligan_bar

    A Halligan and flat head axe. When joined they are known as "the irons" A Halligan bar and a flathead axe can be joined (and partially interlocked, head-to-toe) to form what is known as a married set, set of irons or simply the irons. This combination of tools is most common within the fire service.