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Description
britax trio Britax Romer Trio Rio + Baby-Safe Pro Style Black + BaseThe Britax Rmer Rio Trio includes the stroller, the Baby Safe Pro Group 0+ car seat, and its Isofix base, offering a complete solution from birth to 4 years. If you're looking for a lightweight, compact, and urban stroller, this duo is perfect for you! At just 55 cm wide and weighing only 10 kg, this compact stroller is designed to accompany families in the city. The Britax Rmer Rio stroller adapts to all situations. Fold it with just one hand, carry
The Britax Römer Rio Trio includes the stroller, the Baby-Safe Pro Group 0+ car seat, and its Isofix base, offering a complete solution from birth to 4 years.If you're looking for a lightweight, compact, and urban stroller, this duo is perfect for you!
At just 55 cm wide and weighing only 10 kg, this compact stroller is designed to accompany families in the city. The Britax Römer Rio stroller adapts to all situations. Fold it with just one hand, carry it easily with the practical carrying handle, and enjoy freedom of movement wherever you go.
Choose the option you like best; the Britax Römer Rio has two collections available with different fabrics: Style and Lux.
The STYLE collection features options like Carbon Black and Teak, with modern designs and melange fabric that promotes ventilation, keeping the baby cool.
The LUX collection, in Soft Taupe and Urban Olive colors, combines sophistication and comfort with high-quality, sustainable fabrics and synthetic leather details.
Main features of the stroller:
- From birth up to 22kg (approx. 4 years)
- Travel system: can be combined with a car seat, infant carrier, and bassinet (sold separately)
Thanks to its lightweight design and swivel wheels, the Britax Römer Rio trolley maneuvers easily even in the tightest spaces, such as elevators.
Shopping basket with a capacity of up to 5 kg.
- Reclines with just one hand
- Reversible seat
- Footrest adjustable to 3 different positions
- Extendable canopy with UPF50+ sun protection and breathable mesh window to allow air to circulate on warmer days.
- Sturdy wheels and all-wheel suspension ensure a smooth ride, even on streets with sidewalks or uneven roads.
- Ergonomic and adjustable handlebars easily adapt to your height, whether you are taller or shorter.
Includes bassinet adapters, car seat adapters, and cup holders.
Weight: 10kg (with seat)
Dimensions when closed: 78 cm x 32 cm x 55 cm
The Britax Romer Baby-Safe Pro car seat is the brand's lightest and most innovative car seat. Designed to transport babies between 40 cm and 85 cm tall or weighing up to 13 kg (from birth to approximately 15 months of age).
Newborn reducer with energy-absorbing foam padding.
- Adjustable headrest and seatbelts
- Extra-wide sun canopy with UPF50+ sun protection
- Ergo Recline Position: a flatter, more ergonomic position for healthy spinal development.
- Side Impact Protection: the sides absorb a large percentage of the force caused in case of impact.
Installation using the VARIO BASE 5Z isofix base (sold separately) or the car's seat belt.
With the VARIO BASE 5Z isofix base, you can easily adjust the angle of the car seat in six different positions, providing a more ergonomic and safe position for your child during any trip and in any car.
- Removable and machine-washable lining
Weight: 3.9 kg
The Vario 5Z Isofix base fits the Baby-Safe Pro and Dualfix 5Z car seats. It accompanies your child from their first trip home until they are four years old. The seats can be easily removed and installed with just one click and rotate to facilitate placing the baby. Although it is safer to keep your child rear-facing until age 4, the Dualfix 5Z seat can be turned forward-facing after 15 months and 76 cm, thanks to the 360º rotation of the Vario 5Z Isofix base.
In cars with reclined seats, your child's head may fall forward when installed in the seat, which is why the Isofix Vario 5Z Base can be adjusted to six different positions to provide the best combination of safety and comfort for your child.
The Isofix Vario 5Z base includes a safety bar that prevents the car seat from tilting in the event of an accident. This bar is shorter and more compact, offering more legroom and making it easier to transport.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
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4.4 ★★★★★
Based on 616 reviews
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 5
This is my Superman
Format: Paperback
Before super villains came along, Superman fought corrupt businessmen and world leaders. In this volume, you get stories like Superman trapping a wealthy mine owner in his own mine so he can feel what it’s like for his exploited workers (as I type that, I thought of a great parallel that might get this review removed haha), forced warring leaders to settle their differences in person, and destroyed a ghetto to get the government to pay to give the poor people modern housing (today our government would just leave them homeless but I digress)
At some point in this volume, you get the first supervillain and it gradually goes away from this great Superman at that point but this Superman is my Superman, rough scripting/art and all
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Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2021
★★★★★ 5
Superman: The Golden Age: Volume 1 Review
Format: Paperback
If you’re a fan of, or are interested in the Golden Age of comics, this book is for you. This is really the mainstream beginning of superhero comics. Before everything became mired in continuity, there were one-shot stories that were fun, and often dark. I definitely also recommend this for people who want to get into Superman as a character. For the price, the amount of content you get just can’t be beat.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2020
★★★★★ 5
This is a Superman I can believe in
Format: Paperback
This is the original Superman, the one who made the character a hit. His powers have limits - a fire threatens his life! - and he uses them for the little guy, against social injustice. One of the best stories, from Action #5, has Supes fighting a breaking dam and flood, but mostly he's fighting human crookedness - crooked lobbyists, crooked football coaches, crooked mine owners, crooked taxi rackets. This Superman is a law unto himself, dependent on nothing but his strength and his personal sense of right. He's a lot more like Samson in that way than he's a Christ figure, and the result is stories in which he lightheartedly smashes slums so the government will have to build decent housing for the poor, smashes cars of reckless drivers, smashes an oil well to bankrupt the crooked promoters. Private property means nothing to him. Neither do legal rights. He's not here to fight for law and order, he's here to fight for justice as he sees it. The police? the government? They're feckless at best, and more often they're part of the problem. There's a strong Progressive sensibility here: if institutions don't benefit the people, the people need to take charge and change things. That's the Superman we see here, and it's the Superman I like best - the original Superman with brute vigor, a passion for justice with no subtlety, and no taking himself too seriously. It's not art, but it's what made comic books. And it still stands up.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2014
★★★★★ 5
Where it all began
Format: Paperback
Superman was a hit almost from day one, selling not only millions of comics but quickly went on to star in radio shows, movie serials, TV shows, cartoons, movies and every other media under the sun.
And it all starts here. This volume reprints the very first Superman stories from 1938 - the Superman chapters from Action Comics 1-13, the New York World's Fair special and Superman #1, some of the rarest and most valuable comic books ever published.
The art is crude but serviceable, but the stories are surprisingly political. Rather than fighting super villains or aliens Superman spends more of his time taking on corrupt businessmen and politicians. In one early story he ends a war in Europe by kidnapping an arms maker and forcing him to fight in the trenches. After his experience he swears never to make weapons again. This is a Superman who takes on the real issues of his time, and while the solutions are simplistic his goals are a lot more impressive than stopping bank robbers or killer robots.
An early super villain, the Ultra Humanite, puts in a appearance but even his plot is centered around labor unrest rather than death rays.
This is a fascinating look into the history of American comics. politics and popular culture. I recommend it to anyone with an interest in those subjects.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2011
★★★★★ 4
The Menacing Man of Steel
Format: Paperback
This story tracks Superman's first fifteen stories beginning with Action Comic #1 through Action Comics #13 and also includes the New York World's Fair Comics #1 story and a few pages that Superman #1 added to its reprints of the stories in Action Comics #1-#4.
These fourteen stories features Superman as defender of the weak against a variety of foes including munitions dealers who Jerry Siegel charged with starting wars to line their own pockets, heartless mine owners, gangsters, and slum lords.
Superman's tactics were far rougher than they would become as Superman became a little more mild during the 1940s. Superman,like Batman struck fear in the hearts of criminals. Though Batman needed a cool name and a scary costume, all Superman needed to was to keep dropping and catching suspects until they talked.
Superman's rough edge would begin to get out of line. In Action Comics #8, he decided to solve the problem of slums by tearing them down forcing the government to rebuild as they had during recent hurricanes. The police responded by putting a warrant out for him for understandable reasons.
From here, Siegel made Superman even more forceful culminating in Action Comics #11 which sees the Man of Steel declare war on "Reckless Drivers." Declaring war involves forcibly seizing control of a radio station to broadcast a warning and then destroying all the automobiles in the police impound lot, among other very destructive acts. The stories serve as an almost cautionary tale of the danger of someone with unstoppable and no humility. It reflects the brashness of a 23-24 year old writer. Thankfully Superman would grow in the 1940s into a character that inspired by hope than by fear.
However, despite the more menacing Superman in this book, there are some fun stories in here. My Absolute favorite is Action Comics #6 which features an agent pretending to represent Superman and selling merchandising rights for the Man of Steel, which turned out to be prophetic of the merchandising machine Superman would become. Action Comics #7 features another story of Superman helping out somebody whose just in trouble and needs help. Action Comics #13 introduces the Ultra-Humanite, the first real supervillain, though we only get to meet him briefly.
Overall, this is great for adult Superman collectors who want to read all of his stories. For kids, I'd probably recommend Superman in the Forties for a more balanced look at the Man of Steel.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2013