qertvegas.blogg.se

Left 4 dead 2 smokers
Left 4 dead 2 smokers














Images shown are representative only and final product may vary. If you wish to collect the same product number, you must authenticate your previous statue in the series, Tank, prior to the close of the preorder period. This is the second in our Left 4 Dead 2 line.

left 4 dead 2 smokers

Cast in high quality poly-stone, the statue is hand finished and hand painted to exacting standards. Highly limited at only 750 pieces available worldwide.

Left 4 dead 2 smokers full#

The Smoker comes packed in a foam interior full colored box with a validation card which ensures your product is genuine.

left 4 dead 2 smokers

He measures approximately 15 inches tall, including the base. In order to create the most accurate statue, we have used the actual game files. The Smoker has been faithfully recreated, standing upon some urban destruction, scouting the area for survivors with which to attack. If any obstacles block the victim from being dragged to the Smoker, he will choke his target instead. The Smoker's tongue can be launched out of its mouth at high speeds, and when it reaches one of the Survivors, it automatically wraps around the target's body and drags him/her back towards the Smoker. The Smoker is an Infected with a long, whip-like tongue. The table shows some better uses for the time they save.Gaming Heads is proud to introduce the second in our Left 4 Dead 2 line, the Smoker! The fact that each cigarette they smoke reduces their life by 11 minutes may spur them on. The first day of the year is traditionally a time when many smokers try to stop, and on 1 January 2000 a record number might be expected to try to start the new millennium more healthily. 5 However, it shows the high cost of smoking in a way that everyone can understand. Non Refundable Deposit: 43.00Non-refundable deposit will be charged immediately upon order placement. This calculation is admittedly crude-it relies on averages, assumes that the health effects of smoking are evenly spread throughout a smoker's lifetime, presupposes that the number of cigarettes smoked throughout a lifetime is constant, and ignores the difficulties in classifying people as either lifetime smokers or non-smokers. If we then assume that each cigarette makes the same contribution to his death, each cigarette has cost him, on average, 11 minutes of life:Ħ.5 years=2374 days, 56 976 hours, or 3 418 560 minutesĥ772 cigarettes per year for 54 years=311 688 cigarettesģ 418 560/311 688=11 minutes per cigarette. 4 We calculated that if a man smokes the average number of cigarettes a year (5772) from the median starting age of 17 until his death at the age of 71 he will consume a total of 311 688 cigarettes in his lifetime. Because of the harmfulness of smoking, society will have to start an intensive campaign against it. We used the proportion of smokers by age group, the median age of starting smoking, and the average number of cigarettes smoked per week in the 1996 general household survey. Applying the rates of Doll et al to the latest interim life tables for men in England and Wales, with adjustment for the proportion of smokers and non-smokers in each five year age group, 3 we found a difference in life expectancy between smokers and non-smokers of 6.5 years. 2 Average life expectancy from birth for the whole population or subgroups can be derived from life tables.

left 4 dead 2 smokers

1 The relative death rates of smokers compared with non-smokers were threefold for men aged 45-64 and twofold for those aged 65-84, 1 as corroborated elsewhere. We derived the difference in life expectancy for smokers and non-smokers by using mortality ratios from the study of Doll et al of 34 000 male doctors over 40 years. Our calculation is for men only and based on the difference in life expectancy between male smokers and non-smokers and an estimate of the total number of cigarettes a regular male smoker might consume in his lifetime. We estimated how much life is lost in smoking one cigarette. These findings may also be converted into differences in life expectancy. Editor-Studies investigating the impact on mortality of socioeconomic and lifestyle factors such as smoking tend to report death rates, death rate ratios, odds ratios, or the chances of smokers reaching different ages.














Left 4 dead 2 smokers