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"9T" Titanium Magnetic Bracelet (Too many magnets to count!)

"9T" Titanium Magnetic Bracelet (Too many magnets to count!)

Regular price $75.00 USD
Regular price $299.95 USD Sale price $75.00 USD
Sale Sold out

9T - Wow!! 7/16' Wide & "Too many magnets to count". Whether you like it or not this bracelet will "pump you up." The ultimate light weight magnetic titanium bracelet with a ton of 3300 Gauss north facing neodymium rare earth magnets. How many is "Too Much?"

27, 29 and 31 respectively or 89,100 - 95,700 or a whopping 102,300 Gauss in the XL. This purchase also qualifies for a free cable style bracelet @ checkout($39.95 value). Remember 9T is so strong it will "pump you up." Have some fun get a 9T today - Go with a Winner!!

Max Baer Jr. (above picture inset) - "Jethro" from the Beverly Hillbillies has bought several of our bracelets including this style and he swears by them, (In a Good Way) We Love you too Max!

This item ships the day after you order it and will be at your door within 2-4 days with tracking (when e-mail address is provided @checkout) via USPS priority mail

Max Baer Sr. (The real story versus the movie Cinderella Man)

Max Baer (February 11, 1909 – November 21, 1959) was a famous American boxer of the 1930s, onetime Heavyweight Champion of the World, and actor.

He was born Maximilian Adelbert Baer in Omaha, Nebraska, the son of Jacob Baer (1875-1938) and Dora Bales (1877-1938). His older sister was Fanny Baer (1905-1991), and his younger sister and brother were Bernice Baer (1911-1987) and boxer-turned actor Buddy Baer (1915-1986).

His father was a butcher. The family moved to Colorado before Bernice and Buddy were born. In 1921, when Maxie was twelve, they moved to Livermore, California, to engage in cattle ranching. He often credited working as a butcher boy and carrying heavy carcasses of meat for developing his powerful shoulders.

He turned pro boxer in 1929, progressing steadily through the ranks. A ring tragedy little more than a year later almost caused him to drop out of boxing  . 




Max Baer boxed in eighty four professional fights from 1929 to 1941. In all, his record was 72-12-0 (53 knockouts), which makes him a member of the exclusive group of boxers to have won fifty or more bouts by knockout.



He was inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1968, the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1984 and the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1995.

Max Baer once said, "I never had a fight out of the ring. I never harmed anyone outside the ring. I loved people."

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