»
Which iron is best -ceramic or stainless steel
(Page 1)
Welcome to MoneySavingExpert.com's Forums!
THE EASY WAY: All the Forum's best tips go in MoneySavingExpert's weekly E-mail Plus you'll get all the new guides, deals and loopholes. It's free & spam free
IMPORTANT! This forum isn't moderated. If you spot a spam, illegal, offensive, racist, libellous post or PM please email abuse@moneysavingexpert.com
Remember, this is an open forum! Anyone can post so always exercise caution when acting on info. Don't post links for personal gain. Except in the referrers section and always declare any interest.
I have a Tefal steam generator. It's a great iron, but it has a ceramic plate, and it gets quite black, and it's hard to get clean. I would have preferred if it had a stainless steel plate.
Are the steam generator irons heavier than the normal ones? The water is held in a tank, not in the iron itself.
The Following User Says Thank You to jackieb For This Useful Post:Show me >>
I have a Tefal steam generator. It's a great iron, but it has a ceramic plate, and it gets quite black, and it's hard to get clean. I would have preferred if it had a stainless steel plate.
Are the steam generator irons heavier than the normal ones? The water is held in a tank, not in the iron itself.
Thanks jackieb
The problem of the steam generator ones for my Mum,would be the weight of lifting it unto the iron board,storing etc,as she has a bad arm.
I have a Tefal steam generator. It's a great iron, but it has a ceramic plate, and it gets quite black, and it's hard to get clean. I would have preferred if it had a stainless steel plate.
Are the steam generator irons heavier than the normal ones? The water is held in a tank, not in the iron itself.
Me too after a couple of Tefals I switched to a Phillips one.
I was going to say that too, to set up is heavier, but once in place the actual iron is lighter.
Dane to win Celebrity Big Brother
The Following User Says Thank You to MrsE For This Useful Post:Show me >>
Ceramic is lighter for sure and correctly finished the surface will be more resistant to picking up muck. It also has lower friction meaning it should move across the surface easier. This is why ceramic is often used in pump seal faces.
Thanks for that MrsE,I think I will definately go for stainless steel plate,is your iron quite lightweight?
No mines a big steam generator (I love them).
But I picked it for the soleplate as till them I'd only ever had Tefal, but once they start sticking they get harder & harder to clean. They seem to be like saucepans, the non-stick seems to wear away with use.
I'm loving the Philips stainless steel soleplate. Make sure you check though as they do one they call cezera (sp?) & its like the Tefal.
Go for Philips ones with the Careeza (ceramic) soleplate.
Very good irons. Much easier than stainless and the Careeza coatings don't seem to wear out.
Previous ones have only stopped working through getting smashed from dropping on the floor!! :rolleyes:
Tefal irons are coated with Teflon (PTFE), which is actually quite a soft material and very prone to scratching, whereas the Philips Careeza coating is a very hard wearing ceramic product.
Tefal teflon (PTFE) coatings ARE rubbish by the way. With pans, once you've used Meyer/Anolon pans you'll wonder why you EVER bought Tefal ones.
Every Little Helps me fly the world with Tesco!
Last edited by withabix; 17-02-2008 at 8:17 AM..
The Following User Says Thank You to withabix For This Useful Post:Show me >>
Go for Philips ones with the Careeza (ceramic) soleplate.
Very good irons. Much easeier than stainless and the Careeza coatings don't seem to wear out.
Previous ones have only stopped working through getting smashed from dropping on the floor!! :rolleyes:
Tefal irons are coated with Teflon (PTFE), which is actually quite a soft material and very prone to scratching, whereas the Philips Careeza coating is a very hard wearing ceramic product.
Tefal teflon (PTFE) coatings ARE rubbish by the way. With pans, once you've used Meyer/Anolon pans you'll wonder why you EVER bought Tefal ones.
Thank you for that info withabix - do you also happen to know which phillips I should go for,for best steam & power,or should I just for the highest in both,for easy ironing?
Go for Philips ones with the Careeza (ceramic) soleplate.
Very good irons. Much easier than stainless and the Careeza coatings don't seem to wear out.
Previous ones have only stopped working through getting smashed from dropping on the floor!! :rolleyes:
Tefal irons are coated with Teflon (PTFE), which is actually quite a soft material and very prone to scratching, whereas the Philips Careeza coating is a very hard wearing ceramic product.
I'd agree with all that. I had a tefal iron which got scratched easily and the surface became quite rough.
Now onto my second Philips Careeza (dropped first one) with ceramic soleplate and its great. Feels nice to iron with and the surface has not a mark on it, v hardwearing.
There are a few to choose from, could you get to a shop to see how they feel in the hand. Mine is a philips Azur 4340 and its quite heavy.
The Following User Says Thank You to saving-grace For This Useful Post:Show me >>
I'd agree with all that. I had a tefal iron which got scratched easily and the surface became quite rough.
Now onto my second Philips Careeza (dropped first one) with ceramic soleplate and its great. Feels nice to iron with and the surface has not a mark on it, v hardwearing.
There are a few to choose from, could you get to a shop to see how they feel in the hand. Mine is a philips Azur 4340 and its quite heavy.
Thanks for that -off to lakeside now to lift irons!!
Would also recommend a mesh ironing board rather than a solid-top one. The newer steam irons which produce a large amount of steam tend to do a 'hovercraft' impression on solid boards!!
Pls be nice to all MoneySavers. There's no such thing as a stupid question, and even if you disagree courtesy helps. Take care over copyright. Use excerpts and links rather than copying long text. This site asserts copyright on all comments posted on the board.