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Bubble King® 1000-2500 für BK DeLuxe extern
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Bubble King® 1500 Pumpe
Bubble King® 1500 Pumpe
Technical data Bubble King® 1500 Pump:
48 Watt/h // 1.500 ltr./h Air inlet // 2.000 ltr./h Water inlet
for Bubble King® DeLuxe 250 external
pump complete with pumpholder normal high
operating voltage: 230 Volt 50 Hz (also in 110V/60Hz available)
Protection class: IP 68 (submersible pump)
Weight: 4,4 kg
Height of intake side: center 130 mm
Dimension: 150 mm wide / 350 mm length / ~ 220 mm height
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There are too many bitter renrtes on this blog waiting for doom and gloom so that they can scoop up properties on the pennies (not going to literally happen). The bitter renrtes don't take into account all the homeowners, yes homeowners, that are: 1) not overleveraged (i.e., have greater 50% equity in their house and can pay off their house at any time); 2) are not in debt; and 3) value the stability of owning a home under reasonable financing conditions (i.e., don't have to subject your family to moving every year, staying in a good public school district system, developing ties to the community in which you would like to live for the next 20-30 years). Yes, real estate is overinflated; yes, if a relatively small percentage of homeowners end up defaulting on their mortgages nationwide, it will cause a global economic meltdown (it will take less than 5% of Freddie Mac/Fannie Mae's portfolio to go under before there are serious global consequences). But if that doom and gloom scenario comes to pass (to you renrtes that are dreaming of buying a 4/3 house in a major metro are for 100k), how many you renrtes will be able to afford the house? Under an economic catastrophe, how many of you can blow 100k on a house since food, shelter, etc. . . will eat up the bulk of your expenses? I hope you bitter renrtes are absolutely debt-free, have $500k-1m (at least in cash), have gold, have foreign currency, etc. . . to weather the storm. If not, don't gloat too much. By the way, if the government starts printing money like crazy, then so long as you are not in debt, have some gold reserves and can make the fixed monthly mortgage payment (and be in the position to pay off the mortgage at any time), have a stable job (can live on one person's salary), you are not screwed since the money you owe (i.e., the mortgage) will be worth less and you will pay the bank bank in dollars that are worth less. Get it? That's the best position to be in. And yes, we responsible homeowners that believe real estate is inflated will be able to scoop in and buy some real estate (i.e., vacation homes, investment properties) at "fire" prices if that doom and gloom scenario comes to pass but only once there is blood in the streets. Bitter renrtes: careful what you wish for . . . . happen). The bitter renrtes don't take into account all the homeowners, yes homeowners, that are: 1) not overleveraged (i.e., have greater 50% equity in their house and can pay off their house at any time); 2) are not in debt; and 3) value the stability of owning a home under reasonable financing conditions (i.e., don't have to subject your family to moving every year, staying in a good public school district system, developing ties to the community in which you would like to live for the next 20-30 years). Yes, real estate is overinflated; yes, if a relatively small percentage of homeowners end up defaulting on their mortgages nationwide, it will cause a global economic meltdown (it will take less than 5% of Freddie Mac/Fannie Mae's portfolio to go under before there are serious global consequences). But if that doom and gloom scenario comes to pass (to you renrtes that are dreaming of buying a 4/3 house in a major metro are for 100k), how many you renrtes will be able to afford the house? Under an economic catastrophe, how many of you can blow 100k on a house since food, shelter, etc. . . will eat up the bulk of your expenses? I hope you bitter renrtes are absolutely debt-free, have $500k-1m (at least in cash), have gold, have foreign currency, etc. . . to weather the storm. If not, don't gloat too much. By the way, if the government starts printing money like crazy, then so long as you are not in debt, have some gold reserves and can make the fixed monthly mortgage payment (and be in the position to pay off the mortgage at any time), have a stable job (can live on one person's salary), you are not screwed since the money you owe (i.e., the mortgage) will be worth less and you will pay the bank bank in dollars that are worth less. Get it? That's the best position to be in. And yes, we responsible homeowners that believe real estate is inflated will be able to scoop in and buy some real estate (i.e., vacation homes, investment properties) at "fire" prices if that doom and gloom scenario comes to pass but only once there is blood in the streets. Bitter renrtes: careful what you wish for . . . .
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