Ellka
Water boils (3 l) in 20-25 minutes.
I personally did not come across 5 and 10 liter thermopots. I saw a maximum of 4 liters.
For "wash", in my opinion, a thermopot is not an option. Everything about the kitchen (tea, soup, etc.) is very convenient and quite economical when compared with a kettle. But it is not capable of replacing a water heater, even if it is a flow type.
IMHO.
Pelaga
:) in the country, you often have to warm up the kettle to wash your ass after a diaper ... hands ... legs ... and so on ... and often it is urgently needed ... right now there is not a minute to warm the water ... he is all in this ... what is called natural ... and waits ... and we are like crazy we run ... as a result, grandmother a couple of times without waiting for me to come running with a teapot ... she washed my little child with cold water ... so I think ... and we drink tea often and a lot ... but sometimes since you can't collect all at once ... so we heat 50 times ..
and if you add half a half and the time is also reduced ... and I also read the quick button in the characteristics, what is this? .. does anyone know ...
Ellka
I will not say about the fast boil button, in my Panasonic it is not.
And the heating time of course depends on the amount of water and its temperature.
I usually set a timer for the night so that the thermopot heats up by the morning, and then refill it when about a liter remains in it. But every time I top up to full. From the moment I bought it and began to use it, I never had to wait for hot water.
Kapet
Quote: Pelaga

:) in the country, you often have to warm up the kettle to wash your ass after a diaper ... hands ... legs ... and so on ... and often it is urgently needed ... right now there is not a minute to warm the water ... he is all in this ... what is called natural ... and waits ... and we are like crazy we run ... as a result, grandmother a couple of times without waiting for me to come running with a teapot ... she washed my little child with cold water ... so I think ... and we drink tea often and a lot ... but sometimes since you can't collect all at once ... so we heat 50 times ..
and if you add half a half and the time is also reduced ... and I also read the quick button in the characteristics, what is this? .. does anyone know ...
It was mainly for such purposes - a small child with my daughter, at least making and drinking tea is a problem for her when we are at work - and a thermopot was purchased so that there was always a ready supply of boiling water or just hot water at hand.

If the dacha, then look here https://Mcooker-enn.tomathouse.com/in...ic=3276.0 my post about the increased requirements for water quality for a thermopot.
NiLarna
I have a Panasonic, I don't remember the letter. Three liters. One that has an electric and manual pump and 4 modes: 60, 80, 90 and 98 degrees.
Super thing !!!!!

He is at work at my place - colleagues gave it to the doctor (at my request)
I really like to drink green tea while working. I buy a good one, which can be brewed 3-4 times (I have my own teapot made of Yixin clay, especially for making green tea). Previously, you had to run to the teapot in the next room - you wash up, and when you are busy, there is no time to do this at all. And now it's just a fairy tale !! I sit like a princess, pour hot water into a teapot and get high. I brewed it, poured it into a cup, drink it, and refilled the kettle.
Or drink mate, you also need to top up constantly - beauty with a thermopot !!!
For green tea, I heat the water to 80 degrees. I don’t like to boil water once again - I don’t think it is useful. And our water is filtered, boiling it 10 times is completely unnecessary.

In short, I share my know-how on how to heat water in a thermo-steam to the required temperature and not bring it to a boil. This can be useful for those who do not want to boil water after topping up / filling; who sets, for example, 90 degrees after 80 (in this case, the thermopot will first boil the water, and then slowly cool it to 90) and does not want to bring the thermopot to a boil; or someone like me disconnects it from the network for the night and there remains boiled water, which you don't want to boil again the next time you turn it on.
We turn on the thermopot, select the desired temperature (for example, 80 degrees). We wait and look at the temperature sensor - how much is there now.As soon as the temperature reaches 80 degrees (if you missed it and it's already 85 - it's not scary, quickly move on) - press the timer button. Moreover, not once, but as many times as necessary to go through all its parameters and reset it to 0. The heating of the water stops and the thermopot continues to work in the mode of maintaining the set temperature. And if you missed and at the moment the temperature is higher than the selected one - as expected, the thermo-pot will gradually cool the contents to the selected one and will maintain it.
And it doesn't come to boiling!
Here's a way - for picky green tea lovers and those who do not like water boiled over several times.
This method has been established empirically. For I really do not like to spoil green tea with "dead" water. And the instructions do not contain a word on the question of interest. As soon as I was banished over the thermo-pot to stop boiling! In the end - everything worked out
Trendy
Thank you, NiLarna , for such a find and a detailed description. This boiling was very embarrassing for me when it came to purchasing a thermopot. And now you can think it over again!
nelya
Girls, tell me, but he "eats" a lot of electricity if the whole day is turned on to maintain the temperature. I bought it today, it’s turned on (all of a sudden it’s itching to drink something), and the neighbor says that I should watch my food. counter, otherwise it will soon take off from the amount of food. appliances
NiLarna
Quote: nelya

Girls, tell me, but he "eats" a lot of electricity if the whole day is turned on to maintain the temperature. I bought it today, it’s turned on (all of a sudden it’s itching to drink something), and the neighbor says that I should watch my food. counter, otherwise it will soon take off from the amount of food. appliances

Congratulations on your purchase.

The neighbor is just jealous of you!

Why spend a lot of electricity there? It's not just a kettle, but also a thermos, the flask itself keeps the temperature. In the characteristics of Panasonic they write: "Power in the mode of maintaining hot water: 20 - 46 W". I read a good comparison somewhere - the energy consumption of a thermopot is like a small light bulb. So don't worry!
NiLarna
I got an idea .. I don't know how smart it is.
You can probably cook yogurt in a thermo pot!
Pour 1/3 of water into it, heat to 40-45 degrees (fortunately, there is a window where the temperature is displayed), disconnect it from the network, put a container with fermented milk in it and close it. And leave for 3-4 hours.
He's also a thermos - it will keep the temperature. And the volume even in a three-liter thermo-pot is enough to put a rather big container. One and a half liters, or even two. The main thing is to find one that fits optimally inside and does not interfere with the lid from closing.
And in a 4-liter, it must fit even more!

Kitchen equipment maniac accomplices, do you think the idea makes sense?
nelya
Thank you for your answer ... I already got drunk today ... my husband came home from work, and the thermopot was already standing, he laughed and said that he knew that it was useless to fight with me, I’ll still buy what I’m planning ... a week ago I wiped out the multicooker , and two months ago - a bread maker ... what else do we have next?
flua
People! I again come to you for advice - there was a need to buy a thermo pot ..... choose from two Toshiba PLK-45SDRI (XTR) and PANASONIC NC-PF30PWTW ...
I read about both, in Toshiba it attracts a large volume ... In general, I will be glad to any opinions and advice
NiLarna
Toshiba is bigger, no doubt. But if I chose again, I would choose Panasonic again.
I made this conclusion simply by comparing the reviews on Yandex.
From myself I can add that it is slightly warm outside - that is, it keeps the temperature perfectly. Quiet. And, it seems to me, he brings the water to a boil in less than 30 minutes .. Although I did not detect it, I will not argue.
Still - a hand pump is a useful thing. It is very necessary if you drink tea not near the place where the thermopot is constantly, but you need to put it, for example, on the dining table - do not drag an extension cord with an outlet there! At my work, when we celebrate something and set the table, we set my thermopotics for tea. Disconnected, naturally. Very comfortably.
And in general, I still trudge from this device, like a herd of mammoths !!

But it's not critical for me that the volume is 3 liters - it's above the roof for me. Colleagues also pour themselves out of it.
If you really need a lot of hot water at once, you should think about Toshiba. If this is not vital - I advise Panasonic.

Leska
Quote: flua

People! I again come to you for advice - there was a need to buy a thermo pot ..... choose from two Toshiba PLK-45SDRI (XTR) and PANASONIC NC-PF30PWTW ...
I read about both, in Toshiba it attracts a large volume ... In general, I will be glad to any opinions and advice

So PANASONIC produces 4-liter thermopots
flua
... I forgot to write that I need it with the ability to pour water without electricity ... because we want to buy this device for the dacha
nelya
God, girls !!! how good it is that you are, I would not even know about such innovations without you ... I already wrote that I have been using Panasonic's thermopotics (with a pump) for only three days, and there is a lot of delight NiLarna thank you for your advice on how not to bring the water to a boil. Yesterday my eldest son (7.5 years old) made tea and coffee with such pride for everyone (though we were already drunk, but it was difficult to refuse these enthusiastic eyes) ... he sits like this and says: "Mom, we now have three bread makers, one he bakes bread, he makes the second meal, and he makes the third tea and coffee for you "... for some reason he decided that all this is called a bread maker
vismut16
Help who can advice! Unas trouble, the flask of the thermos broke, which has served us faithfully for many years when going on vacation out of town. From this topic I understand that probably a thermopot can replace it for us. Question: how long does it keep heat without electricity.
nelya
Sorry, I have been using a thermo-pot without a year for a week ... but I think that this is a little bit not a thermos ... unless you boil 3 liters, and then take it where you need to and keep the temperature, he will be able to cool down 3 liters, not as fast as in a kettle, everything seems to be more airtight, but still don't steam the coffee, except perhaps tea, baby food. And then, you can only take with you a certain model of a thermopot, which has a manual pump (water supply without electricity). It's still better to buy a brand new thermos. But you can wait for the advice of girls who use a thermopot for a long time, maybe I still underestimated it in this regard
vismut16
Nelya, thanks for the answer, but as usual I did not wait for advice and still bought a Panasonic NC-PG 30P, thank God I was smart enough to take it with a manual pump (due to the ability to keep warm, the consultants, of course, do not know anything) I had to take it out of fear risk. But in the process of the experiment, everything turned out to be wonderful. The thermopot kept the heat around 8 hours, of course, the water in the thermos remained much hotter, which, in principle, is not necessary, since it was necessary to pour it into a glass to freeze.
nelya
vismut16 You are as patient as I just read "what is it" the next day, so my husband bought it and said that he would cut off the Internet, otherwise at such a rate the family will be left without money, but with kitchen appliances ... but you can see it that on the sly rejoices in "such things." I think that you will not regret purchasing. Right now I am sitting and drinking a second mug of tea, and the baby is sleeping. And before, as soon as he lays down, I sit down at the computer, naturally I want to drink something ... I'll go to turn on the kettle (I have Tefal, but it's already 6 years old), as soon as I turn it on, it seemed to be making such noise with a jet engine, which will always wake the baby up with this hiss. And now beauty, silence. In general, super Happy use: flowers: and delicious tea-coffee drinking
Ivanna
What a good thing !!! It's a pity that I didn't know about this !!! I suffered so much with these mixtures, now for hot, then for cold !!! I have two babies 11 months old. and 2 years and both on artificial feeding !!!
nelya
Ivanna It's a pity I have both boys, and both were chasing sis until almost two years, so I didn't know such difficulties as you did. Health to you and your children
Ivanna
Thanks for the sympathy! And I wish you health, because this is the most important thing !!!
Kazak
Tell me pls
I bought myself a Scarlett SC-1222 thermopot.It boils and "drains" seems to be normal both with pump and automation, but
The 2nd time I have completely replaced the water (boiled-drained, ...), but the water still has some kind of burnt smell / taste. This is normal? Still need to "boil" the system? Or did the Ketay people put some wrong rubber tube from the container into the spout?
NiLarna
I have a Panasonic. The very first time when the water was boiled - everything was drained, of course, but even then the water did not smell like anything "burnt". Normal boiled water.
And after nothing extraneous in the smell / taste was felt.

Maybe you still have some parts "washed out"? Try to boil some more.
If, after 5-10 boils and drains, the water does not stop smelling burnt, then I think we need to think about replacing the thermo pot. Most likely a marriage.
Kapet
Quote: Kazak

Tell me pls
I bought myself a Scarlett SC-1222 thermopot. It boils and "drains" seems to be normal both with pump and automation, but
The 2nd time I have completely replaced the water (boiled-drained, ...), but the water still has some kind of burnt smell / taste. This is normal? Still need to "boil" the system? Or did the Ketay people put some wrong rubber tube from the container into the spout?

Try boiling water with citric acid a couple of times.
If it doesn't help, then I'm sorry - "It's Scarlett"
Kazak
Thanks for your participation.
Understood - the smell was given by a silicone insert on the spout (tube?). We had to drive boiling water more than 5 times. Everything returned to normal. Thermo pot is cheap. It is not clear at what temperature it maintains boiling water - how much does the counter wind up? Without electricity (heating), burning boiling water is sufficient for up to 3 hours inclusive. Since he does not have his own programmer, he separately bought a digital timer for 14po2 programs (Kanlux Cyber ​​TM-4 / S) - along with a yogurt maker.
Kapet
Quote: Kazak

Thanks for your participation.
Understood - the smell was given by a silicone insert on the spout (tube?). We had to drive boiling water more than 5 times. Everything returned to normal. Thermo pot from cheap ...

Why buy such an expensive Scarlet? Wouldn't it be better to take a cheap Panasonic?
Kazak
Quote: Kapet

Why buy such an expensive Scarlet? Wouldn't it be better to take a cheap Panasonic?

Was in Ukraine (comfy?). And there were no Panasonic products, and only a scarlet with a manual pump. And besides, I need a universal timer, in an outlet, and not in a thermo-pot.
danute
Recently I bought a Panasonic NC-PF30PV thermopot. I bought it based on the opinions of members of the forum. Before that, there was a 4.5-liter Toshiba thermopot, but it broke. I already wanted to buy the same one, but your opinions made me look at another brand. Many thanks to all!
Rina
Hairpin, you need to forbid entry here ... who here gave all sorts of vows, what more, no, no?

I have a question about thermopots. Who uses this miracle? Does it completely replace the kettle?

Hairpin
So I already remembered about the vow !!! But no, no I had this: "During 2010 I will not buy kitchen appliances. "A vacuum cleaner is not a kitchen appliance.

But about the thermopot ... I read that Temka and decided for myself that I definitely do not need a thermopot ... To constantly spend electricity so that the water is always hot ... At least in my kettle it boils in 2-3 minutes. Can't I wait? Plus he's so healthy ...
Rina
microbial corpses do not bother me much (by the way, I stir sugar in tea with a silver spoon), I just think, what's the point in water, which is hot all day? But how tired I am of constantly refilling the kettle! I'm afraid that at our consumption rates, even in a good large thermo-pot, I will pour water well twice less less often, but how much will he boil this water, if less than a kilowatt?
Hairpin
And if you buy a thermopot, will you have to pour less water?
Rina
sorry, not less, but less often
Heh, if there was a thermopot that would maintain the temperature from the car network (dreams-dreams) ...
Nastasya
Quote: Hairpin

Rina72!
Let's think logically. Here you have a simple electric kettle. You poured there tap water with live microbes. Boiled. You got water with fresh corpses of microbes. You drank tea.After a few hours, you poured this water out (because you have corpses of microbes there already stale, but decomposed) and poured it with fresh microbes.
What will happen to you with a thermopot? Can you imagine these corpses after being in hot water for several hours? !!! This will already be a microbial broth !!! And you will drink it? !!!
Hairpin, talent !!! I'm going to throw out my thermopot ...

It's actually a very handy thing. I thought that I definitely DO NOT need it. Until I experimented with a thermopot bought as a gift. As a result, I bought myself. I got used to it, in the evening I put it on a timer - in the morning there is ready hot water of the required temperature (I set it to 90 degrees). Hot water all day at the right time. The only negative is that if the water runs out at an inconvenient moment (unexpected guests, for example), then it boils longer than in a regular kettle.
strong
It completely replaces the kettle and thermos. Always hot, who loves boiling water - pressed the button, boiled it. However, it is convenient, perhaps, for a family of more than 2 people, if the displacement is large. We have been using it for 4 years already. Everyone is happy
Aunt Besya
And how many thermo-pot heats the water from the moment of flooding?
zvezda
Quote: Aunt Besya

And how many thermo-pot heats the water from the moment of flooding?
Average 20 minutes
Nastasya
Quote: Rina72

while I do not have the opportunity to buy a Panasonic, I will have to do with the same brown that I was.
Prior to Panasonic, I used a Daewoo thermopot. And I can say that when I changed it to Panasonic, at first I was even somewhat disappointed. For example, the Daewoo thermo-pot gives a signal when the boiling water is over and when you press the unlock button. In principle, a convenient function. Another 200 ml more volume. But there are no timers (but, on the other hand, Panasonic has a strict division of 4/6/8 hours). So it turned out to be quite a decent thermal sweat.
Nastasya
Quote: Aunt Besya

And how many thermopots heats the water from the moment of flooding?
Exactly, about 20 minutes. At the same time, it seems to me that the Daewoo thermopot boiled water faster. Although here it is necessary to conduct an experiment.
sweetka
I bought myself a thermopot last fall. and did not regret a second! very handy thing. the only thing that, in order to save money, was taken without the function of pouring water in the absence of electricity. so I got caught a couple of times: there is no light - the krantik does not react. which means you need to either sovazza inside with a cup, or try to pour it by manipulating the thermopot itself. and that, and the other option - fun, but otherwise - happy as an elephant.
julifera
Comrades, no one has come across such a model by accident:

Philips HD4686

This is not a thermopot - this is a kettle with a temperature support function in 4 modes:
40 - 60 - 80 -100 ° C

As far as I understand, the Panasonic thermopot first boils water and only then lowers and maintains the selected lower one.
That is, it is impossible to automatically heat the purified living water without boiling, for example, to 70 for white tea, you need to somehow monitor it in order to throw it off in time and prevent unnecessary boiling.

A question about Phillips - does he also boil first, or is it possible to ask him an initial heating of 40 - 60 - 80 C without boiling?

I just don't want to kill water for tea ...

julifera
It's a shame, this phillips practically starts to flow for everyone ... is it really impossible to attach good quality to good functionality, because it's not 5 kopecks, but 100 bucks
Anastasia
Quote: julifera

It's a shame, this phillips practically starts to flow for everyone ... is it really impossible to attach good quality to good functionality, after all, it's not 5 kopecks, but 100 bucks

I really wanted to buy it for the New Year for myself, I also paid attention to these temperature adjustments and I wanted this model so much. But in the end, the reviews also confused me and turned me away from the purchase. I just bought Phillips from the Kutsin series, with a bell.
julifera
Oh, sorry how ...
It seems that it just heats up only to the temperature that you choose ...

I will continue to heat water for tea in the microwave, although everyone here is telling me that microwaves spoil the structure of water, as if boiling it does not make it dead.

So tea from MV is at least mountainaaazdo tastier and more aromatic than a boiled teapot ...

Panasonic might have taken it, but I'm tortured to catch it at 80 degrees, and I don't need to keep so much water heated for a long time, and it will take more space than a two-liter teapot ...
julifera
And I'm also interested in such a thermopot:

Cameron CTR-4060

You can set 3 temperatures in it.

Does anyone use it?

I have found very little information in the internet, except that someone's pump stopped pumping after 1.5 years and the owner repaired it himself.
julifera
Owners of Panasonic, please respond:

when the thermo-sweat heats the water for the first time - does it somehow show the dynamics of temperature change?

Can you find out for example when the water is 40 degrees?
Or when it cools from 98 to 60 - somehow you can see that the water, for example, is at 70 C?
Uncle Sam
I have a Panasonic without a display. During heating, the set temperature lamp flashes. In any given mode (70 or 98 degrees), he brings it to a boil for the first time.
Do you want to get UN-boiled water of 40 degrees?
julifera
I have a good 5-stage filter, you can drink water without boiling.
I want to get 70-75 C unboiled for making white tea,
if you take hot water, then the taste begins to be killed.
And boiled over, and then chilled - also fu.

Previously, I drank all black teas in a row, and a second brew, brewed in a couple of hours, and half-drunk in the morning or since yesterday, without reacting to the taste.

And then the taste buds pierced, I began to feel the difference ... and you can't get rid of it. Plus a bunch of usefulness when fresh tea is not brewed with boiling water.

A 40 C - I took this as an example

In order not to bring Panas to a boil, there was a trick in the branch, I know it, just to use it, you need to watch the heating process.
Andreevna
Quote: julifera

Owners of Panasonic, please respond:

when the thermo-sweat heats the water for the first time - does it somehow show the dynamics of temperature change?
Yes, it does. The gap between the numbers is 5 degrees. That is, when you have the temperature that you need, you can press the timer and the water heating will stop.

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