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🔥 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
It was silly! Out of such explosive encounters nothing but legal remedies came nowadays; and of all people she had ever seen, she could least connect Jack Muskham with the Law. She noticed a hat in the hall, and heard voices, as she was passing her uncle's study. She had barely taken off her own hat when he sent for her. He was talking to the little terrier man, who was perched astride of a chair, as if riding a race. "I think because SHE'S a Cherrell, my dear." "I am going on board myself at once," the captain proceeded, "but I must ask you to keep your boat waiting for half an hour more. You will be all the longer with your wife, you know. I thought of that, Crayford." He descended the house-steps. The discreet servant wished him good morning, with a certain cheery respect — the man was delighted to have seen the last of his hard master for some months to come. Amelius stopped and turned round, smiling grimly. He was in such a reckless humour, that he was even ready to divert his mind by astonishing a footman. "Richard," he said, "are you engaged to be married?" Richard stared in blank surprise at the strange question — and modestly admitted that he was engaged to marry the housemaid next door. "Soon?" asked Amelius, swinging his stick. "As soon as I have saved a little more money, sir." "Damn the money!" cried Amelius — and struck his stick on the pavement, and walked away with a last look at the house as if he hated the sight of it. Richard watched the departing young gentleman, and shook his head ominously as he shut the door. The brave fellows knew it then! And that they might not add to the cares of their chief, they had pretended to know nothing, and had worked away at the preparations for the winter with the same zeal as the year before. "A courier of the Company." "Dinny asked me if there was anything he could do to show publicly that he wasn't a coward. You'd think there might be, but it's not easy. People object to be put into positions of extreme danger in order that their rescuers may get into the papers. Van horses seldom run away in Piccadilly. He might throw someone off Westminster Bridge, and jump in after him; but that would merely be murder and suicide. Curious that, with all the heroism there is about, it should be so difficult to be deliberately heroic." The Indians paid — "Stop — stop, Catharine, for mercy's sake! You never said so much that was good concerning me, save to introduce some bitter censure, of which your praises were the harbingers. I am honest, and so forth, you would say, but a hot brained brawler, and common sworder or stabber." 'And no doubt soon will be,' said the minor canon; 'for I hear that he is linked up with the most discreditable gang of persons.' "Why, Mother? No child has any religion worth speaking of till it's grown up, and then it can choose for itself. Besides, by the time my children, if I have any, are grown up, the question will be academic." "The less we say of them the better," said the glover, becoming again grave. "Brothers he hath none; his father is a powerful man — hath long hands — reaches as far as he can, and hears farther than it is necessary to talk of him." They found Lady Mont involved with the representatives of 'Plantem's Nurseries.' But the inherent defectiveness of the human mind which my metaphysical book sets itself to analyze, does lead it constantly to speak of Marriage and the Family as things as fixed and unalterable as, let us say, the characteristics of oxygen. One is asked, Do you believe in Marriage and the Family? as if it was a case of either having or not having some definite thing. Socialists are accused of being "against the Family," as if it were not the case that Socialists, Individualists, high Anglicans and Roman Catholics are ALL against Marriage and the Family as these institutions exist at the present time. But once we have realized the absurdity of this absolute treatment, then it should become clear that with it goes most of the fabric of right and wrong, and nearly all those arbitrary standards by which we classify people into moral and immoral. Those last words are used when as a matter of fact we mean either conforming or failing to conform to changing laws and developing institutional customs we may or may not consider right or wrong. Their use imparts a flavour of essential wrong-doing and obliquity into acts and relations that may be in many cases no more than social indiscipline, which may be even conceivably a courageous act of defiance to an obsolescent limitation. Such, until a little while ago, was a man's cohabitation with his deceased wife's sister. This, which was scandalous yesterday, is now a legally honourable relationship, albeit I believe still regarded by the high Anglican as incestuous wickedness. Amelius took it, looked at it, and ventured on his first familiarity with her — he kissed it. She only said, "Don't!" very faintly. "What misfortune, please your Grace?" replied MacLouis. "I have heard of none." 'Has she told you anything — anything that —' 'What is the good of having these Chancery proceedings against Jermyn?' For some reason or other, Mrs. Farnaby seemed to be surprised, for the moment, by my personal appearance. Her husband had, very likely, not told her how young I was. She got over her momentary astonishment, and, signing to me to sit by her on the sofa, said the necessary words of welcome — evidently thinking something else all the time. The strange miserable eyes looked over my shoulder, instead of looking at me. "Oh, I've been so busy, Mrs. Calligan," replied Aileen. "I've had so much to do this fall, I just couldn't. They wanted me to go to Europe; but I didn't care to. Oh, dear!" she sighed, and in her playing swept off with a movement of sad, romantic significance. The door opened and Mamie came in. Her commonplace face brightened at the sight of Aileen. "This will never do," he said to himself. "This will never do. I'm not sure whether I can stand much of this or not." Still he turned his face to the wall, and after several hours sleep eventually came. A momentary change passed over the blank terror of her face. Her color rose faintly, her lips moved. She abruptly put a question to him. "All right, old man, you're up against your equals now. Fire away!" 'Ah, sir, there's many ways of working. I look at it you're one of those as work with your brains. That's what I do myself.' I felt that I was friends with the cultivators at once. These broad-hatted, blue-clad gentlemen who tilled their fields by hand — except when they borrowed the village buffalo to drive the share through the rice-slough — knew what the Scourge meant. "H'm!" he muttered, and crossed out the 'wind and limb.' The momentary animation died out of her face again. She drew back from him and dropped into a chair. He advanced toward her, astonished and alarmed. She shrank in the chair — shrank, as if she was frightened of him. "Yes, I knew, but —" So honest Amelius planned his way of escape from the critical position in which he found himself. He went to his bed, troubled by anxieties which kept him waking for many weary hours. Where was he to go to, when he left Sally? If he could have known what had happened, on that very day, on the other side of the Channel, he might have decided (in spite of the obstacle of Mr. Farnaby) on surprising Regina by a visit to Paris. And who dares die, who stoops to fly, Neil Booshalloch saved his friend the trouble of reply. 'I admit everything,' said I. 'Their Government's provisional; their law's the notion of the moment; their railways are made of hairpins and match-sticks, and most of their good luck lives in their woods and mines and rivers and not in their brains; but for all that, they be the biggest, finest, and best people on the surface of the globe! Just you wait a hundred years and see how they'll behave when they've had the screw put on them and have forgotten a few of the patriarchal teachings of the late Mister George Washington. Wait till the Anglo-American-German-Jew — the Man of the Future — is properly equipped. He'll have just the least little kink in his hair now and again; he'll carry the English lungs above the Teuton feet that can walk for ever; and he will wave long, thin, bony Yankee hands with the big blue veins on the wrist, from one end of the earth to the other. He'll be the finest writer, poet, and dramatist, 'specially dramatist, that the world as it recollects itself has ever seen. By virtue of his Jew blood just a little, little drop — he'll be a musician and a painter too. At present there is too much balcony and too little Romeo in the lifeplays of his fellow-citizens. Later on, when the proportion is adjusted and he sees the possibilities of his land, he will produce things that will make the effete East stare. He will also be a complex and highly composite administrator. There is nothing known to man that he will not be, and his country will sway the world with one foot as a man tilts a see-saw plank!' In either case death would await the Lieutenant and his companions, and the fort, erected at the cost of so much labour and suffering, would be destroyed. 'Gad! the furniture is in a bad state,' said Harold, glancing round at the middle room which they had just entered; 'the moths seem to have got into the carpets and hangings.' I do not feel that it is right to suppress altogether any part of one's being. In itself abstinence seems to me a refusal to experience, and that, upon the lines of thought I follow, is to say that abstinence for its own sake is evil. But for an end all abstinences are permissible, and if the kinetic type of believer finds both his individual and his associated efficiency enhanced by a systematic discipline, if he is convinced that he must specialize because of the discursiveness of his motives, because there is something he wants to do or be so good that the rest of them may very well be suppressed for its sake, then he must suppress. But the virtue is in what he gets done and not in what he does not do. Reasonable fear is a sound reason for abstinence, as when a man has a passion like a lightly sleeping maniac that the slightest indulgence will arouse. Then he must needs adopt heroic abstinence, and even more so must he take to preventive restraint if he sees any motive becoming unruly and urgent and troublesome. Fear is a sound reason for abstinence and so is love. Many who have sensitive imaginations nowadays very properly abstain from meat because of butchery. And it is often needful, out of love and brotherhood, to abstain from things harmless to oneself because they are inconveniently alluring to others linked to us. The moderate drinker who sits at table sipping his wine in the sight of one he knows to be a potential dipsomaniac is at best an unloving fool. In another quarter of an hour all felt that the house, whilst resisting the enormous pressure, was sinking through the soil of the island. They knew that the crust of the ice must have given way, and that the house would fill with water! One of the things that caused Cowperwood no little thought at this time, and especially in view of his present extreme indifference to her, was how he would bring up this matter of his indifference to his wife and his desire to end their relationship. Yet apart from the brutality of the plain truth, he saw no way. As he could plainly see, she was now persisting in her pretense of devotion, uncolored, apparently, by any suspicion of what had happened. Yet since his trial and conviction, she had been hearing from one source and another that he was still intimate with Aileen, and it was only her thought of his concurrent woes, and the fact that he might possibly be spared to a successful financial life, that now deterred her from speaking. He was shut up in a cell, she said to herself, and she was really very sorry for him, but she did not love him as she once had. He was really too deserving of reproach for his general unseemly conduct, and no doubt this was what was intended, as well as being enforced, by the Governing Power of the world. "Beg pardon for interrupting you, sir," said Marbre; "but the water cannot have been produced by the melting of ice." "I wish I'd have known," said Owen, grimly. "I'd have shot the dirty dog." Sir Lawrence shrugged the thin shoulders which at seventy-two were only beginning to suggest age. "Oh!" said Dinny, almost taken aback: "a sort of dark yellow." There is no ratio betwixt sand and gems.' 'Of course it would have been nonsense to say that he had no regard whatever towards your money.' Jack Muskham sat silent, his long face impassive and his long legs stretched out. The discussion continued. "She is gone, they tell me," said Catharine —"gone about an hour since." "He looks like a man to go to in trouble." 'Young man,' said Mr Lyon, pausing in front of Felix. He spoke rapidly, as he always did, except when his words were specially weighted with emotion: he overflowed with matter, and in his mind matter was always completely organised into words. 'I speak not on my own behalf, for not only have I no desire that any man should think of me above that which he seeth me to be, but I am aware of much that should make me patient under a disesteem resting even on too hasty a construction. I speak not as claiming reverence for my own age and office — not to shame you, but to warn you. It is good that you should use plainness of speech, and I am not of those who would enforce a submissive silence on the young, that they themselves, being elders, may be heard at large; for Elihu was the youngest of Job's friends, yet was there a wise rebuke in his words; and the aged Eli was taught by a revelation to the boy Samuel. I have to keep a special watch over myself in this matter, inasmuch as I have a need of utterance which makes the thought within me seem as a pent-up fire, until I have shot it forth, as it were, in arrowy words, each one hitting its mark. Therefore I pray for a listening spirit, which is a great mark of grace. Nevertheless, my young friend, I am bound, as I said, to warn you. The temptations that most beset those who have great natural gifts, and are wise after the flesh, are pride and scorn, more particularly towards those weak things of the world which have been chosen to confound the things which are mighty. The scornful nostril and the high head gather not the odours that lie on the track of truth The mind that is too ready at contempt and reprobation is —' "I heard something on my way here," he proceeded, "which suggests to my mind a method of meeting the difficulty that you have just mentioned. Unless I am entirely mistaken, Miss Burnham will not say No to the change that I have in view for her." "Your Royal Highness forgets," said Ramorny, pointing to his mutilated arm. 'I suppose I had better go home,' said Mrs Robarts. 'I will go and put my things up, and then I will send James for them.' 'Well, they have been intimate;' and Robarts, when he was asked to preach at Chaldicotes, could not well refuse.' During these doings at Framley, Lucy Robarts still remained at Hogglestock, nursing Mrs Crawley. Nothing occurred to take her back to Framley, for the same note from Fanny which gave her the first tidings of the arrival of the Philistines told her also of their departure — and also of the source whence relief had reached them. 'Don't come, therefore, for that reason,' said the note, 'but, nevertheless, do come as quickly as you can, for the whole house is sad without you.' Douglas understood the sneer, but only replied to it by one of those withering looks with which he was accustomed to intimate his mortal resentment. He spoke, however, with haughty composure. 'Hush-h-h,' looked, rather than spoke, Mrs Proudie. 'The grief of spirit which that bad man caused me nearly broke my heart, and all the while, you know, he was courting —' and then Mrs Proudie whispered a name. There was a new undertone of tenderness in her voice — innocent tenderness that openly avowed itself. The reviving influences of the life at the Home had done much — and had much yet left to do. Her wasted face and figure were filling out, her cheeks and lips were regaining their lovely natural colour, as Amelius had seen in his dream. But her eyes, in repose, still resumed their vacantly patient look; and her manner, with a perceptible increase of composure and confidence, had not lost its quaint childish charm. Her growth from girl to woman was a growth of fine gradations, guided by the unerring deliberation of Nature and Time. 'Do you think not, archdeacon?' Then we came to a new land, and the first thing that one of the regular residents said was 'This place isn't India at all. They ought to have made it a Crown colony.' Judging the Empire as it ought to be judged, by its most prominent points — videlicet, its smells — he was right; for though there is one stink in Calcutta, another in Bombay, and a third and most pungent one in the Punjab, yet they have a kinship of stinks, whereas Burma smells quite otherwise. It is not exactly what China ought to smell like, but it is not India. 'What is it?' I asked; and the man said 'Napi,' which is fish pickled when it ought to have been buried long ago. This food, in guide-book language, is inordinately consumed by . . but everybody who has been within downwind range of Rangoon knows what napi means, and those who do not will not understand. Cowperwood called his servant to take charge of the vehicle, and Butler stalked solemnly out. GEORGE W. STENER, ESQ., October 21, 1871. City Treasurer. DEAR SIR— Under the existing circumstances you will consider this as a notice of withdrawal and revocation of any requisition or authority by me for the sale of loan, so far as the same has not been fulfilled. Applications for loans may for the present be made at this office. Very respectfully, "I am afraid so," said Mrs Barnett, laughing; "and probably the first discoverer of the Pole will have been led thither in pursuit of a sable or a silver fox." I built my soul a lordly pleasure-house
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