The best steamer on the market. It would be great if they could offer a version that is UL listed or ETL listed at a minimum. If not completely certified, using components with these certs would be a great start. Also an RF remote instead of an infrared remote would be great so you can control the temp inside of a sauna tent (you can place your remote and phone inside of a waterproof phone pouch). Also if you want a quick steam session, only fill it up half way and it will heat up twice as fast. Always use distilled water to go easy on the stainless steel and avoid corrosion. Also would be great if a premium version could be offered with a 316 stainless boiler to make it even more robust/safer/corrosion resistant. Be sure to use this with a portable GFCI adapter (Hubbell makes quality ones) or GFCI wall outlet. This ensures you reduce your risk of being electrocuted. It's also a good idea to do a continuity test with a multimeter (harbor freight ones are cheap) every so often on the ground wire and steel sauna pot. I run this steamer on an industrial steel monitor riser stand that has ventilation holes and have ziptied a noctua industrial fan underneath the stand to keep the steamer electrics cool and make the unit ultra reliable. This is a great company too. Had one fail due to overheating and they shipped a new one out to me for free. With my cooling solution, haven't had any problems since and hoping to buy any future upgraded ones with those upgrades I mentioned earlier!Also, I use 1/2" ID food grade silicone brewers tubing to ensure the highest steam flow rate possible. I run the steam tube through one of my grow tent vent holes and cinch it up around the tube to ensure the maximum 1/2" ID steam tube reaches the inside of the tent (no smaller adapter ID restrictions). I also use a smaller tent 27"x27"x63" with the same silicone tubing as a breathing tube between the two closed zips. Run the CO2 tests yourself with a CO2 meter and you'll see a breathing tube makes the most sense. Also I use an ikea unfinished wooden dining chair inside to avoid chemicals flowing through my skin pores into my body (see emerging research on this). All of the grow/sauna tents do leak somewhat, so I've added a plastic washing machine drain pan to ensure any tent water that leaks is contained.Here are some other things that are part of my build:Box cutter inside a hanging pouch as an emergency exit precaution, glow-in-the-dark paracord used to make extra long pulls for zips to see/use inside the tent, a water proof LED light with RF remote for ambient lighting inside, dewalt digital timer to control the noctua cooling fan, wall adapter for noctua fan, zip tie the steamer onto the monitor riser stand, drying rack for a bath towel used to dry the tent after use (spin dry in washer then hang dry. Also the towel is self cleaning with ~97% being clean water).Also I keep the inside temperature below 110 degrees to avoid adhesive offgassing in the tent (adhesive between the foil/vinyl). Open, heated skin pores make it easier for any toxins to enter the body (again see research on this). This unit will easily heat to 140 degrees F (w/my tent size), but until I can shield the adhesive from the heat with another material somehow, I keep it below 110. If someone can test VOCs with a meter above 110 for the rest of the community, that'd be cool.Overall, this is what works for me.