Whirlpool Bath Pumps keyword

2008-11-14 – 10:37 下午

Dedicated Whirlpool Baths
Developer Whirlpool Baths
Pegasus Self Fit Whirlpool Bath Kits
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Kohler Whirlpool Tub
Whirlpool Bath Tubs
Jacuzzi Whirlpool Bathtubs
best Whirlpool Bathtubs

Whirlpool Bathtub

2008-11-14 – 10:33 下午

Product Description:
Material: ABS
Dimension: 1800*1200*660mm

Main Components
1-1.5HP Whirlpool Pump
10-Small Jets
4-Big Jets
1-Electricity Leakage Protector
1-Computer Control Panel With FM
1-Handheld Shower
1-Water Circulation
1-Underwater Light
1-Bracket
2-Pillows
1-Drain
1-Skirt
JZ-0318 brings you a satisfactory bath effect as you desire.
Option
1-Thermostatic Faucet
1-Ozone Generator
1-0.25HP Air Pump And 8 Air Bubbles Jets
1-Heater

Inner Packing: Bubble
Outer Packing: Two-layer carton and plywood
Packing size: 1.9 M3
Gross Weight: 89.5 Kgs
Loading Quantities:
20FT—13 sets
40FT—28 sets
40HQ—35 sets

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Hydropool Whirlpool Bath

2008-11-14 – 10:26 下午

Whirlpool Bath features 36 massage jets and is available in super-deep 1800×800mm bath size. The bath is supplied as standard with the 4 Hole Bath Shower Mixer and complimenting basin mixer as well as featuring a stunning electronic control pad with digital display, FM Radio plus 2x speakers, 2x Chromotherapy lights, underwater light, inline heater & much more!

Pump Whirlpool

Pump Whirlpool

Pump Whirlpool

2008-11-14 – 10:11 下午

SSICC, 7260 Two Person Single Pump Whirlpool w/ Wenge Decking and Illumatherapy - EG20-EG50

 Pump Whirlpool

shower enclosures

2008-11-14 – 10:02 下午

In recent years, a general preference towards shower enclosures has emerged in comparison to traditional bathtubs. There is now a wide variety of shower solutions available in the market place. However, the bathtub has always remained popular as it provides a relaxing bathing experience – a pampering retreat in which to unwind.
Suite Door, the new, elegant “shower & bath” combination by Cesana, merges a shower enclosure and a bathtub into a single product that satisfies the requirements of each function and offers the ‘wow’ factor in the bathroom.

shower enclosures

  • Ablutionary Pillow
  • Acrylic Panel Sheet
  • Artificial Stone
  • Bath Accessories
  • Bathroom Furniture
  • Bathtub
  • Faucets
  • Massage Bathtub
  • Sauna Room
  • Shower Curtain
  • Shower Enclosure
  • Shower Room
  • Shower Room
  • Shower Room
  • Solid Surface Material
  • Wash Basin
    The shower area is wide, protected by a simple and linear glass panel to the floor, that covers the small closet outside the tub. Inside the tub, the closet turns into a comfortable shower seat, or a shelf for the bath. For easy access Suite Door is equipped with a small internal step which also serves as an armrest during bathing. Suite Door has a remarkable dimension to ensure the maximum comfort and offers both a showering and bathing experience in one, making great use of space. The Suite Door bathtub is made in “Teplar”, an innovative and unbreakable material, which is also heat-resistant and recyclable.
    Bathtub: cm 90 x 180 and cm 70 x 170 x h58
    Door: cm 90 x h201
  • Shower Room International Exhibition

    2008-11-14 – 9:38 下午

    International Exhibition of Ceramic Tile and Bathroom Furnishings
    Exhibition Centre
    Piazza Costituzione 5, 40128 Bologna (Italy)
    Sept. 30 - October 4, 2008.

     shower room

  • Ablutionary Pillow
  • Acrylic Panel Sheet
  • Artificial Stone
  • Bath Accessories
  • Bathroom Furniture
  • Bathtub
  • Faucets
  • Massage Bathtub
  • Sauna Room
  • Shower Curtain
  • Shower Enclosure
  • Shower Room
  • Shower Room
  • Shower Room
  • Solid Surface Material
  • Wash Basin
  • bathtub shower screen

    2008-11-14 – 8:36 下午

    The Suite series proposes solutions which integrate the shower with bathtub in perfect synthesis. The bathtubs are created entirely in heat formed acrylic (5 mm thickness) reinforced with resin and fiberglass.

    bathtub shower  screen

    Shower Room
    Massage Bathtub & Shower Cabinet & Steam Room Electronic Control System from Chinese First-class manufacturer, we have manufacture Electronic Control System For Shower Cabinet , Electronic Control System For Steam Room , bathroom furniture.

  •   Bathroom Furniture
  •   Shower Room
  •   Bath Tub
  •   Pump Whirlpool
  •   Faucets
  •   Top Shower
  •   Hydromassage Jets
  •   Ablutionary Pillow
  •   Shower Screen
  •   Shower Curtain
  •   Tempered Glass
  •   Aluminum Profile
  •   Fiberglass
  •   Drainer
  •   ABS Sheets
  •   Soap Dispenser
  •   Shower Trays
  •   Shower Panel
  •   Pole Shower
  • Bathroom Taps

    2008-10-14 – 7:59 上午

    Bathroom Taps are more complex than you might initially think.  There are different types of taps such as standard bath taps, bath fillers and bath shower mixers.  You would select the different type, depending on your needs. 

    It’s important to decide what your main use for the bath is.  This may sound a silly suggestion, but you need to think about how many people use the bathroom during busy periods.  You may have a large family with everyone wanting a shower before school or work.  You may live on your own, hence your bathing needs will be modest. 

    Shower Room
    Massage Bathtub & Shower Cabinet & Steam Room Electronic Control System from Chinese First-class manufacturer, we have manufacture Electronic Control System For Shower Cabinet , Electronic Control System For Steam Room , bathroom furniture.

    How is a bathtub made?

    2008-09-05 – 4:06 上午

    The bathroom is not usually the place one thinks of to illustrate the principles of mechanization. Yet the transformation of bathing facilities aptly illustrates Western society’s obsession with efficiency and mechanization. Baths in ancient Greece and especially in the Roman Empire were much more elaborate and technoiogicaily sophisticated—and iess private—than the simple “outhouses” of 20th-entury rura! America. The obvious attention given to the design, construction, and maintenance of bashing facilities indicates just how integral the activities of the bath have been to cultural identity for centuries.In 19th-century America, bathing was not commonplace. In the 1880s, probably five out of six city dwellers had no proper bathing facilities, just the use of a pail and sponge. During the last half of the century, numerous efforts were made to encourage communal bathing facilities. Reformers also advocated the use of showers in private homes as wel! as public facilities with only modest success. Essentially, Americans did not consider bathing at! that necessary for general health nor did they associate if with the more complete mental and physical therapy sessions (hot-air or steam baths, massage, gymnastics) common in other cultures. For upper-class Americans, a trip to a spa might occur once a year, but certainly not once a weak.The bathtub was considered a luxury well into the 20th century. The reai increase in the appearance of bathtubs did not come until the 1920s, with the extension of central water systems. Following the form of hotei buildings developed in the 1380$, houses, tenements, and apartments were increasingly built with separate rooms devoted to the bath. The production of sanitary enameled bath fixtures (toilets, sinks, and tubs) doubted between 1921 and 1923. The relatively standardized, mass-produced tub meant for privatB, familial use soon came to dominance.Bathtub BackgroundThough humans have bathed since prehistoric times, baths served a primarily religious, social, or pleasurable function far more often than a hygienic one. The Greeks had bathrooms, complete with water supply and drainage, as early as 1700 B.C. The Romans developed bathing as a central social habit in the third century B.C., constructing elaborate public buildings of enormous size with several rooms for disrobing, exercise, and bathing.After the fall of the Roman Empire, bathing declined in popularity in Europe, though it did survive as a part of monastic routine, and in Muslim countries. The Muslim public bathhouse included a dressing room, cold bath, and warm bath clustered around a domed, central steam chamber. Public baths regained popularity in Europe in the 11th and 12th centuries.After the fall of the Roman Empire, bathing declined in popularity in Europe, though it did survive as a part of monastic routine, and in Muslim countries. The Muslim public bathhouse included a dressing room, cold bath, and warm bath clustered around a domed, central steam chamber. Public baths regained popularity in Europe in the 11th and 12th centuries.In the 18th century, it became fashionable to spend a season at a watering place (such as Bath in England) but only 19th-century research into hygiene made a virtue of bathing. Bathing took place in primitive and usually portable cold baths at schools and institutions. Though permanent tubs were installed in bedrooms during the mid-19th century, plumbing was nonexistent and tubs had to be emptied by hand. Only after World War I did plumbing and bathtub production allow the bath with running water to become a permanent installation in the home.Bathtubs are now part of the plumbing fixtures and fittings industry, which totaled around $5.7 billion in the U.S. in 1994. This market is shared about equally between fixtures and fittings. Over three million bathtubs, including whirlpool baths and hot tubs, are shipped per year. Plumbing fixtures are classified into three industries according to the materials from which they are made: vitreous, metal, and plastic. In recent years changing consumer tastes have displaced other materials in favor of plastics for bathtubs, whirlpool baths, and lavatory sinks. Sixty-two percent of bathtubs, 92% of whirlpool baths, and 28% of lavatories are made out of plastic. Besides plastic, the standard material for bathtubs is enameled cast iron or steel. Bathtubs must be manufactured according to standards established by the American National Standards Institute.The Manufacturing Process: Enameled BathtubsRaw MaterialsThe metal base for bathtubs is made of gray cast iron (containing carbon, silicon, manganese, phosphorus, and sulfur), titanium steel, zero carbon steel, or partially decarburized steel. These compositions have been specially designed for enameling. The enamel is made from a frit or glass that consists of a variety of raw materials, both manufactured chemicals and natural minerals. These include clay, feldspar, barium carbonate, boric acid, limestone, fluorspar, sand, and other oxides.Preparing the metalThe metal is either cast into molds (gray cast iron) or drawn into sheet and formed (steel). Before enameling it must then be cleaned. Cleaning of castings is carried out by blasting the surface with chilled iron grit, sometimes after preliminary annealing (heating at 1350-1500°F [730-820°C]). The grit, or “shot,” is projected through nozzles using compressed air, or flung against the surface by centrifugal force using a special machine. A combination of both methods may be used. This blasting removes any dirt or sand particles from the mold from the metal surface.Sheet metal must undergo a more complex cleaning process. First the surface is cleaned by shot-blasting after annealing to release stresses and to remove any grease deposits. Degreasing is done with chemical cleaners, first with an organic solvent, followed by a hot alkaline solution. The organic solvent removes most of the grease and oil from the metal surface. The alkaline solution removes the remaining film of oil and leaves a surface ready for acid pickling.Acid pickling uses hydrochloric or sulfuric acid or a combination of these acids. This process de-scales the surface, which helps to form a strong bond between the iron and ground-coat enamel. Pickling is followed by rinsing in running water. The next step is sometimes a nickel dip, which uses a solution of nickel sulfate and boric acid to coat the metal with a layer of nickel. This layer also helps to form a good bond with the enamel. The nickel dip is followed by a thorough rinsing of the ware and another dip in a neutralizer solution. This solution consists of soda ash and borax in water and removes any traces of acid, as well as prevents rust. After neutralizing, the metal is dried as quickly as possible to prevent rusting.Preparing the enamelAfter the raw materials are carefully weighed and mixed together in precise amounts, the enamel frit is prepared by melting the batch in furnaces of rotary or continuous type, fueled by oil or gas. When melting is completed, the molten enamel is run out of the furnace in a thin stream into a tank of cold water, which produces small fragments. For continuous furnaces, the molten frit is run between water-cooled rolls, which chills the frit. The frit is then dried and stored in bags. Before the enamel is applied, it must be ground into a powder using a ball mill, with blocks of enamel as the grinding media. If applied wet, the enamel is milled with additions of clay and water to make a slip or slurry.The enameling processDry enamel is dusted on the metal surface, which has been previously heated to a temperature above the melting point of the enamel. The powder melts on contact with the hot article, forming a continuous coating. Firing in a furnace produces a smooth, porcelain-like surface. Wet enamel is applied by a dipping process using a large open tank. After dipping, the coated part is allowed to drain, producing a thin uniform coating. The dipping tank uses a recalculating system to recycle the enamel. The wet enamel may also be applied using automatic spraying equipment.After enameling, the coated parts are dried using cabinet or conveyor dryers heated by gas burners, steam or waste-heat from the enameling furnaces, or infrared lamps. Firing takes place in furnaces heated by metallic heating elements. Two coatings of enamel are normally applied, a ground coat followed by a cover coat. The cover coat takes longer to fire.Raw MaterialsPlastic bathtubs are made out of a number of different polymer materials, including ABS (acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene), acrylic resins, or glass-fiber reinforced polyester. The glass-polyester type dominates the tub-shower market. Special additives may be incorporated into the polymer material to improve fire-resistance. To give a cultured-marble appearance, marble chips or dust can also be added.The starting materials for most plastics are petrochemicals—chemicals made from petroleum and natural gas. These chemicals are mixed with other special chemicals (stabilizers, fillers, dyes or pigments, and plasticizers) in steel tanks and then heated to cause a chemical reaction that converts the mixture into the desired polymer composition. The resulting polymer material is cooled and dried to form a powder, beads, or pellets, depending on the specific process and material.Plastics fall into two groups: thermoplastic and thermosetting. Thermoplastics soften or melt on heating and include vinyl and styrene polymers. Thermosetting plastics, although moldable when produced as simple polymers, are converted by heat and pressure, sometimes using a hardener, to a cross-linked infusible form. Plastics that fall into this category include epoxy resins and polyesters.Forming ProcessesA number of processes are used to form plastics into shapes, including calendaring (squeezing between rollers to form films), casting, compression molding, and injection molding (melting and forcing into a cooled mold).In injection molding, a reciprocating screw machine is generally used, which melts the plastic, pressurizes the melt to inject it into a closed mold, closes the mold so the plastic can solidify, and opens the mold to allow removal of the part. Injection occurs as the screw is hydraulically forced forward in the barrel. During the cooling and solidification period, the screw begins to rotate and melt new material for the next part.Compression molding is used to make both plastic and fiber reinforced bathtubs. For reinforced bathtubs, a mixture of fibers, polyester resin, and pigments, fillers, and other additives are mixed together and formed into a sheet. In this process, a specified amount of resin filler paste is placed onto a plastic carrier film using a special machine. The carrier film is passed under a chopper, which cuts glass roving into short lengths. After the glass falls to the resin bed, another carrier film with another layer of paste is added on top, sandwiching the glass between the two layers. This sandwich structure is passed through a series of compaction rollers to thoroughly mix the fibers and resin.After the material—called a sheet molding compound—thickens, the carrier film is removed and the sheet material is cut into charges, which are placed in matched metal die molds made of machined steel. High pressure is applied, which heats the material so that it flows to all areas of the mold. Heat from the mold activates the catalyst, which achieves curing. Once cured, the part is then removed from the mold.Two processes called hand lay-up and spray lay-up are used to make fiberglass bathtubs. Hand lay-up is a method in which successive plies of reinforcing material or resin-impregnated reinforcement are positioned in a mold by hand. Cure occurs at room temperature with no applied pressure. Special tools are used to work out air bubbles and ensure complete wetting of the fiber, if the polymer is added separately. The spray lay-up process is faster than hand lay-up and involves feeding a stream of chopped fibers into a spray of liquid plastic in a mold cavity. The direction of the fibers is random and the process is usually automated. After lay-up is completed, the plastic must solidify or cure in a reasonable time at room temperature, which occurs via chemical reactions.The Future Since new housing construction is the principal source of demand for plumbing products, the timing and magnitude of the revival of construction activity and the overall economy are pivotal factors in determining the direction of bathtub shipments. Over the past decade, the proportion of new single-family houses with 2.5 or more baths has doubled to about 44%. This has obviously increased the demand for bathtubs, which should continue as long as the economy in general and construction activity improve.Bathtub design is also undergoing an evolution. With the passage of the American Disabilities Acts, bathtubs that accommodate the handicapped are being patented, and this trend should continue. Taking advantage of the molding capabilities of plastic, manufacturers are also designing one-unit bathtub and shower. Safety is another important design factor, and prefabricated slip-resistant surface coatings have been developed.Other design improvements will continue in the area of leak prevention. Such designs include providing a moisture barrier unit between the bathtub and the subfloor, or designing the bathtub so that the wall and base are an integral part of the bathtub. The latter approach relocates all lines of contact between the bathtub and surrounding adjacent surfaces so that they are covered and protected from water penetration.(shower room)

    Bathroom Shower Stalls

    2008-08-06 – 2:18 上午

    Shower stalls come in a range of styles and sizes, and can be custom built to fit a particular space. A shower stall or shower enclosure acts as a waterproof surrounding that confines the water to the shower area and stops the rest of the bathroom from getting drenched. Modern shower stalls are made from tough materials such as tempered glass, acrylic or fiberglass, which look sleek and stylish and have the benefit of being easy to keep clean.

    If you??re considering installing a shower in your Bathroom you??ll need to fit some kind of enclosure around it. This could be as simple as attaching a shower screen to the side of your bathtub, if you??re putting in a shower above the bath. If you want a completely separate shower stall, you??ll need to think carefully about the best location for it. You??ll need to ensure it??s large enough for your needs and that it will fit in with your bathroom??s layout without obstructing access to your bath, sink or toilet.

    You can then purchase all the components that are needed to assemble your shower stall. You??ll need to choose a shower tray ?C this will determine the size of your enclosure. You??ll then need to buy the appropriate number of side panels, and some kind of matching door. Various kinds of folding and sliding shower doors are available. How many side panels you need depends on how many tiled walls you already have. For instance, a corner shower stall will have two walls, so you??ll only need one side panel and a door.

    Shower stalls come in a variety of framed and frameless styles, including clear glass, etched and molded patterns. Frameless shower enclosures are favored for their sleek, open appearance, whereas framed ones come with a choice of different frames such as chrome or stainless steel. Which style you choose depends on your personal tastes and budget, but for the best results think about what look you?re trying to achieve in your bathroom and select a shower stall design that will fit in with your bathroom?