2838238176

🔥 1000W–3500W Titanium / 316 Stainless Steel Submersible Water Heater
With Temperature Control & GFCI Protection
Ideal for Swimming Pools, Bathtubs, Buckets, Baptistries, and Most Liquids

🛡️ Titanium / 316 Food-Grade Stainless Steel
Unlike standard 304 stainless steel, our heaters use highly durable and corrosion-resistant Titanium or 316 stainless steel, ensuring long-lasting performance—especially during extended use. Quiet and stable operation makes them perfect for both personal and commercial applications.

⚡ Fast & Efficient Heating
With powerful 1000W–3500W output and precise temperature control, our immersion heater delivers rapid water heating, saving time and energy. Perfect for cold weather or daily home use—enhancing comfort and convenience for the whole family.

🔌 GFCI Leakage & Overload Protection
Equipped with a Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) and overload safety features, this heater significantly reduces risks of electric shock or fire. The rubber-insulated power cord enhances water resistance and safety in various environments.

🎯 Digital Temperature Control
The corrosion-resistant, highly sensitive sensor maintains temperature within ±0.1°C.
To set your desired temperature:

Long press SET for 3+ seconds while LED blinks

Use ▲ / ▼ to adjust temperature

Press SET again in standby to switch between °C and °F

🌊 Wide Range of Applications
Fully submersible and portable, ideal for:

Swimming Pools

Bathtubs

Buckets & Baptistries

Hot Tubs

Aquariums

Kitchen Sinks

Water Tanks

Livestock Water Troughs
...and more liquid heating needs.

⚠️ Safety Reminders
Always fully submerge the heater before use. Dry operation may cause permanent damage and disable overheat protection.

The unit will restart only after water cools by 25°C / 77°F following an overheat shutdown.

Do not use in metal containers unless properly grounded.

If the rod turns black and cannot be cleaned with steel wool, it is a sign of dry burn—stop using it immediately.

🚨 Coming Soon: Enhanced Safety Features!
We're excited to announce that we'll soon be launching an updated model with Overheat Protection and Dry Burn Prevention to ensure even greater safety during use. Stay tuned for these new features!

✅ Patented Technology. Trusted Worldwide.
We are proud to offer patented immersion heater technology under our brand LINGLONGTEMP—designed for long-term, safe, and efficient operation. Trusted by both households and commercial clients globally.

🛒 How to Buy
Visit Amazon.com and simply search:
🔍 XCLBTFDC
Browse our full product lineup and place your order directly.

🤝 Wholesale & Support
For bulk orders, OEM/ODM collaboration, or technical inquiries, feel free to contact us directly.
🙏 Thank You for Your Support!
We sincerely appreciate your interest in XCLBTFDC products.
Whether for home use or business needs, we are committed to providing you with safe, reliable, and innovative heating solutions.

If you have any questions or collaboration inquiries, feel free to reach out.
📱 WhatsApp: +86 131 6068 3936

Warm regards,
Andy
Brand Representative – XCLBTFDC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"I had something to say to thee, Smith. Canst thou take up a fallen link in my Milan hauberk?"

Just when I was most impressed with my measureless distance from India, my carriage advanced to the sound of slow music, and I found myself in the middle of an Indian station — not quite as big as Allahabad, and infinitely prettier than Lucknow. It overlooked the gardens that sloped in ridge and hollow below; and the barracks were set in much greenery, and there was a mess-house that suggested long and cooling drinks, and there walked round about a British band. It was just We Our Noble Selves. In the centre was the pretty Memsahib with light hair and fascinating manners, and the plump little Memsahib that talks to everybody and is in everybody's confidence, and the spinster fresh from home, and the bean-fed, well-groomed subaltern with the light coat and fox-terrier. On the benches sat the fat colonel, and the large judge, and the engineer's wife, and the merchant-man and his family after their kind — male and female met I them, and but for the little fact that they were entire strangers to me, I would have saluted them all as old friends. I knew what they were talking about, could see them taking stock of one another's dresses out of the corners of their eyes, could see the young men backing and filling across the ground in order to walk with the young maidens, and could hear the 'Do you think so's 'and 'Not realty's' of our polite conversation. It is an awful thing to sit in a hired carriage and watch one's own people, and know that though you know their life, you have neither part nor lot in it.

"I hope I have not offended you?" Amelius ventured to say.

True love I think is not simply felt but known. Just as Salvation as I conceive it demands a fine intelligence and mental activity, so love calls to brain and body alike and all one's powers. There is always elaborate thinking and dreaming in love. Love will stir imaginations that have never stirred before.

Aileen, not ungenerous — fool of mingled affection and passion — could now have cried. She pitied her father from her heart; but her allegiance was to Cowperwood, her loyalty unshaken. She wanted to say something, to protest much more; but she knew that it was useless. Her father knew that she was lying.

"If I only dared tell you!" she murmured. "I hold so to your good opinion of me, Lucy — and I am so afraid of losing it."

The young banker sat there staring out of the window, and Steger observed, "It is a bit complicated, isn't it?"

"No place fitter than Falkland," replied Ramorny. "I have enough of good yeomen to keep the place; and should your Highness wish to leave it, a brief ride reaches the sea in three directions."

"Don't be angry with me, dear. I only meant there was some excuse for him."

'Only one word or so.'

"It's just as likely that I'll need it so badly that I can't give it up without seriously injuring myself," added Cowperwood. "That's just one of a lot of things. If you and Senator Simpson and Mr. Mollenhauer were to get together — you're the largest holders of street-railway stocks — and were to see Mr. Drexel and Mr. Cooke, you could fix things so that matters would be considerably easier. I will be all right if my loans are not called, and my loans will not be called if the market does not slump too heavily. If it does, all my securities are depreciated, and I can't hold out."

"I am going away for good. Foch comes to you with this. He is yours if you care to have him. I am only fit to be alone. Forgive me if you can, and forget me.— WILFRID."

'May I go now — I mean as soon as it is convenient?' said Esther, rising.

"Phoebe! Phoebe! you are talking like a heathen. If Mrs. Farnaby has behaved to you with unjust severity, set her an example of moderation on your side. It's your duty as a Christian to forgive injuries."

"Adieu, flowering wilderness!"

7. Marbre, do

"I thought you'd probably forgotten."

Cowperwood hurried to his own home only to find his father awake and brooding. To him he talked with that strong vein of sympathy and understanding which is usually characteristic of those drawn by ties of flesh and blood. He liked his father. He sympathized with his painstaking effort to get up in the world. He could not forget that as a boy he had had the loving sympathy and interest of his father. The loan which he had from the Third National, on somewhat weak Union Street Railway shares he could probably replace if stocks did not drop too tremendously. He must replace this at all costs. But his father's investments in street-railways, which had risen with his own ventures, and which now involved an additional two hundred thousand — how could he protect those? The shares were hypothecated and the money was used for other things. Additional collateral would have to be furnished the several banks carrying them. It was nothing except loans, loans, loans, and the need of protecting them. If he could only get an additional deposit of two or three hundred thousand dollars from Stener. But that, in the face of possible financial difficulties, was rank criminality. All depended on the morrow.

And feed my mind, that dies for want of her.'

I spent ten hours in that huge wilderness, wandering through scores of miles of these terrible streets, and jostling some few hundred thousand of these terrible people who talked money through their noses. The cabman left me: but after a while I picked up another man who was full of figures, and into my ears he poured them as occasion required or the big blank factories suggested. Here they turned out so many hundred thousand dollars' worth of such and such an article; there so many million other things; this house was worth so many million dollars; that one so many million more or less. It was like listening to a child babbling of its hoard of shells. It was like watching a fool playing with buttons. But I was expected to do more than listen or watch. He demanded that I should admire; and the utmost that I could say was: 'Are these things so? Then I am very sorry for you.' That made him angry, and he said that insular envy made me unresponsive. So you see I could not make him understand.

A thousand and thre hundyr yere,

Amelius owned, very reluctantly, that he could do nothing with the old woman who had been the accomplice. "Unless," he added, "I can induce her to assist me in bringing the man to justice for other crimes which I believe him to have committed."

'I see well enough you're deep, Tommy. How came you to know you were born to property?'

"I am glad to be friends with you, Mr. Wardour. I wish I was as well seasoned to fatigue as you are."

"Did you sent it to him, or give it to him?" Mrs. Sowler asked.

Thare thai laid on that time sa fast,

'Yes, immediately; but, Fanny, I must speak to you about Mrs Crawley first. I must go back there this evening, and stay there; I have promised to do so, and shall certainly keep my promise. I have promised also that the children shall be taken away, and we must arrange about that. It is dreadful, the state she is in. There is no one to see to her but Mr Crawley, and the children are together left by themselves.'

A taxi cab drew up. The dog stopped whining, and began to pant.

"Nothing much, so far as I can see," replied Mollenhauer, pacifically. "Things seem to be running smooth enough. You don't know anything that we ought to worry about, do you?"

'I should be worse than a brute did I not do so; but, nevertheless, I cannot allow her to lead me in all things. Were I to do so, I should cease to be a man.'

"I don't like it a little bit, then. I've always wanted a clear sky for Dinny; and this looks to me like a sirocco. I suppose no amount of putting it to her from other people's points of view is any good?"

"You are right, dame," said the armourer; and, throwing the buckler over his broad shoulders, he departed from his house without abiding farther question.

"I'm afraid you don't understand," he said gently.

It was a weary night; and the next day, Felix, whose wound was declared trivial, was lodged in Loamford Jail. He was committed on three counts — for having assaulted a constable, for having committed manslaughter (Tucker was dead from spinal concussion), and for having led a riotous onslaught on a dwelling-house.

'Only what? Come, out with it. Do not mince matters, or think that I shall be angry with you because you scold me.'

Meanwhile the foremost among the constables, who, coming by the back way, had now reached the opening of Tiliot's Lane, discerned that the crowd had a victim amongst them. One spirited fellow, named Tucker, who was a regular constable, feeling that no time was to be lost in meditation, called on his neighbour to follow him, and with the sabre that happened to be his weapon got a way for himself where he was not expected, by dint of quick resolution. At this moment Spratt had been let go — had been dropped, in fact, almost lifeless with terror, on the street stones, and the men round him had retreated for a little space, as if to amuse themselves with looking at him. Felix had taken his opportunity; and seeing the first step towards a plan he was bent on, he sprang forward close to the cowering Spratt. As he did this, Tucker had cut his way to the spot, and imagining Felix to be the destined executioner of Spratt — for any discrimination of Tucker's lay in his muscles rather than his eyes — he rushed up to Felix, meaning to collar him and throw him down. But Felix had rapid senses and quick thoughts; he discerned the situation; he chose between two evils. Quick as lightning he frustrated the constable, fell upon him, and tried to master his weapon. In the struggle, which was watched without interference, the constable fell undermost, and Felix got his weapon. He started up with the bare sabre in his hand. The crowd round him cried 'Hurray! ' with a sense that he was on their side against the constable. Tucker did not rise immediately; but Felix did not imagine that he was much hurt.

He started on his walk, at a pace which set pursuit on the part of Rufus at defiance. The American stood watching him, until he was lost to sight in the darkness. "What a grip that young fellow has got on me, in no more than a few months!" Rufus thought, as he slowly turned away in the direction of his hotel. "Lord send the poor boy may keep clear of mischief this night!"

Sally touched Amelius. "Take me out!" she whispered faintly.

"No," said Fleur; "but at present the thing is in flux — people just talk about it; but expulsion from his Club will be definite condemnation. It's just what's wanted to make opinion line up against him."

"Not true, I hope?"

'Horns and hoofs; that's their usual apparel, according to you and Lady Lufton,' said he, remembering what Mr Sowerby had said of himself.

"I agree, madam, I agree; and may all the women and soldiers accompanying me show themselves as resolute as you. If so, God helping us, we shall indeed advance far."

"I must rouse the cook," he said to himself, with a smile. "That fellow little thinks how useful he is in keeping up my spirits. The most inveterate croaker and grumbler in the world — and yet, according to his own account, the only cheerful man in the whole ship's company. John Want! John Want! Rouse up, there!"

'Dear, dearest woman, don't go on in that way now. Do speak out to me, and speak without jesting.'

'O thank you, it is nothing,' said Mrs Transome, biting her lip and smiling alternately; 'it will soon go off. The pleasures of being a grandmamma, you perceive. The child has taken a dislike to me; but he makes quite a new life for Mr Transome; they were playfellows at once.'

"Well," remarked Sabine, "we won't grumble at that, bears' steaks are as good as reindeers', and we get the fur in! Come along."

Her son turned away his eyes from her, and left her. In that moment Harold felt hard: he could show no pity. All the pride of his nature rebelled against his sonship.

'Uncommonly good-tempered.'

'But they are.'

"Some day," said Dinny, "you're going to tell me something. But at the moment what play are we going to?"

'And I have promised to go to your husband,' said Lord Lufton; 'or rather to your husband's dog, Ponto. And I will do two other good things — I will carry a brace of pheasants with me, and protect Miss Robarts from the evil spirits of the Framley roads.' And so Mrs Robarts turned at the gate, and Lucy and his lordship walked off together. Lord Lufton, though he had never before spoken to Miss Robarts, had already found out that she was by no means plain. Though he had hardly seen her except at church, he had already made himself certain that the owner of that face must be worth knowing, and was not sorry to have the present opportunity of speaking to her. 'So you have an unknown damsel shut up in your castle,' he had once said to Mrs Robarts. 'If she be kept a prisoner much longer, I shall find it my duty to come and release her by force of arms.' He had been there twice with the object of seeing her, but on both occasions Lucy had managed to escape. Now we may say she was fairly caught, and Lord Lufton, taking a pair of pheasants from the gamekeeper, and swinging them over his shoulder, walked off with his prey. 'You have been here a long time,' he said, 'without our having had the pleasure of seeing you.'

"We went wrong in the valley, we went up it instead of down it, we shall only get back to where we were yesterday by crossing the chain of icebergs. Come, come!"

'Perhaps not,' said Lady Lufton, sighing. And then she kissed her son, and declared to herself that no girl in England could be good enough for him.

The Duke stopped, and, after suffering King Robert to indulge for two or three minutes in a reverie which he did not attempt to interrupt, he added, in a more lively tone: "But, cheer up, my noble liege; perhaps the feud may be made up without farther fighting or difficulty. The widow is poor, for her husband, though he was much employed, had idle and costly habits. The matter may be therefore redeemed for money, and the amount of an assythment may be recovered out of Ramorny's estate."

"Give it tongue, my son. What do I seem to think?"

"Well, miss, of course, relatives are difficult; but it could be arranged."

'Pooh, my dear,' said Sir Maximus, 'women think so much of those minutiae. In the present state of the country it is our duty to look at a man's position and politics. Philip and my brother are both of that opinion, and I think they know what's right, if any man does. We are bound to regard every man of our party as a public instrument, and to pull all together. The Transomes have always been a good Tory family, but it has been a cipher of late years. This young fellow coming back with a fortune to give the family a head and a position is a clear gain to the county; and with Philip he'll get into the right hands — of course he wants guiding, having been out of the country so long. All we have to ask is, whether a man's a Tory, and will make a stand for the good of the country? — that's the plain English of the matter. And I do beg of you, my dear, to set aside all these gossiping niceties, and exert yourself, like a woman of sense and spirit as you are, to bring the right people together.'

'Mr Robarts, men say that your present mode of life is one not befitting a soldier in Christ's army.'

'No, I could not. He is the only man friend with whom I was ever intimate, and I cannot bear to think that he should throw himself away. It's horridly improper to care about such a thing, I have no doubt.'

"Don't worry about yours. I'm not marrying your family. I'm marrying you. We have independent means."

'I know nothing of the kind.'

"Trifle not," replied the knight; "I mean the glee maiden, who lately dwelt in this chamber with you."

Young blood must have its course, lad,

Cowperwood waved for silence. He knew all about that. "It all depends on what the politicians decide to do. I'm doubtful. The situation is too complicated. It can't be hushed up." They were in his private office at his house. "What will be will be," he added.

'It is very unfortunate — very.'

On the 10th of September observations showed a displacement of Victoria Island. Only a slight displacement, but in a northerly direction.

"You will not suffer more than I shall, madam," replied Hobson, "and perhaps not so much. It is the chief work of my life; I have devoted all my powers to the foundation of Fort Hope, so unfortunately named, and I shall never cease to regret having to leave it. And what will the Company say which confided this task to me, for after all I am` but its humble agent."

'But they have not been all against you here,' said Mrs Harold Smith. 'If you could arrive at her ladyship's private thoughts tomorrow morning, you would find her to be quite happy in having met the duke. It will be years before she has done boasting of her triumph, and it will be talked of by the young ladies of Framley for the next three generations.'

"Well, I'll see where you are when it's called. You're darling. I'm afraid of you." He shot a level, interpretive glance into her eyes, then left. Aileen's bosom heaved. It was hard to breathe sometimes in this warm air.