Top positive review
8 people found this helpful
Glad I bought this
By Riverkitty on Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2014
This is replacing my 15 year old Rowenta Ultra Professional DM 990E. I iron my work clothes weekly (cotton blouses and cotton pants), and am an avid quilter and fiber artist. Pros: * This iron does a fabulous and speedy job on my work clothes and fabric yardage. I generally take a zen approach to ironing (it's going to take as long as it's going to take), but the speed difference was noticeable. I'm going to love this iron on Sunday nights when I've forgotten to do my ironing and have to do the clothes before I can go to bed. Ironing quilt blocks isn't any faster (Probably because most of the time is due to fidgeting with the block), but the finished results are great. I do a lot of constructed fabric work, so I'm fussy about my blocks looking like they are one flat piece -- this iron makes that easy. * This iron heats up much faster than my old iron, and can keep up with me. My old iron could get through about 10 quilt blocks before it couldn't keep up and stopped producing steam, forcing me to stop and let it reheat. I've put the new iron through its paces, and it keeps up the pace. * The indicators are clearer than my old iron. The old one also had auto-off, but there was no indication of when the iron had shut itself off or reached temperature again. This one clearly indicates when auto-off is active and when it has warmed back up. (For those who complain about auto-off, Rowenta does make irons for professional work rooms that don't have that feature. Get one of those if auto-off bothers you that much.) Things that may bother you (but aren't necessarily cons): * You need to pull the trigger if you want steam. This bothered me the first half day I used it, but now I'm fine with it. Because this iron puts out SO much steam, it's nice to have control over when it comes out. You also need to teach yourself how to use the trigger. Rowenta wants you to use steam on the first pass, and come back over the fabric without steam, to dry out the fabric. This really does make a difference in the finished piece, and also keeps the iron from spitting when you're done. I wonder how many people who returned their iron for spitting were just keeping the trigger pulled all the time they were ironing. * This iron is heavy. A large part of the weight is all the water it holds. Not much you can do about that, except only fill it part way -- if light weight is a priority, look at getting a steam generator instead of an iron. * The first day, the iron seemed unbalanced. Now it doesn't. My assumption is that it's just differently balanced than what I'm used to, and now I've gotten used to this. * 1800 watts means you need a 15 amp circuit. Most homes in the US should have this, but you won't be plugging other power hungry things into the same circuit (vacuum cleaners, hair dryers, other irons) into the same circuit without blowing a breaker. Your sewing machine pulls almost no amps, so that's fine on the same circuit (unless you have a really dodgy electrical system).
Top critical review
15 people found this helpful
One temp wonder DO NOT BUY
By K. Sullivan on Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2014
I do not think I have ever said don't buy an item, but rowenta makes horrible irons and no one should buy them. They last longer than most,but they are not worth the money. At onetime they may have been great but they have gone the way of the may tag repair man living off their reputation. This is the second rowenta that I have bought and neither got hot enough to do a decent job. As an example, today I ironed a number of itms ranging from nylon, to a mix of polyester and rayon to 100% cotton. Because I had had so many problems when I ironed last week and ended up using the linen setting for all my cottons, I decided to try that setting with everything and see if I got any drag on the iron with the items that were blends. Well, the answer was no. The nylon shopping bags had a tiny drag on them, but I was still able to iron them without a problem, actually the items that worked the best were the polyester blend shirts. They were perfect and did not take much time. The cottons were another matter. It is like digging ditches getting cottons to look decent with these irons. This iron has a massive number of steam vents, it is so impressive to look at however,it does not steam automatically. Rather you have to press a bar under the handle to make it steam, as soon as you remove pressure from the bar, the steam stops. This is important because without the steam the iron is barely not at all. I really do not understand what is the problem with companies making irons these days. They all seem to last for 2 seconds and when you find one that lasts,it really doesn't work. Is it too much to ask for a simple iron that really heats up, so you don't have to go back a forth many times to achieve a smooth surface and lasts for say even five years? I am furious that I was sucked into buying this angry that amazon won't take it back,pretty much just angry over the whole experience. Going to a local store this week to see if I can find something that will actually work.
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