My Rowenta iron just dumped all of the water on my ironing board.
#41
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 1,097
My Rowenta is dying. It is probably about 1 -1 1/2 years old. The instructions said to use regular tap water, but I should have known better since our water leans hard. Anyway, I have to have it turned on the highest temperature for it to heat up now and steam. I am not going to get another one :-(
The answer to hard water is vinegar.
Next I'm going to clean my irons with vinegar as they don't seem to be as hot as they once were. I'm hoping this will bring them back to the hot temps I had been getting.
#42
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Peotone IL
Posts: 2,802
I'm just realizing what hard water can do to things. My glasses are all foggy from the dishwater. Then the the dishwasher didn't seem to be doing everything right. Once I learned about hard water(have only lived here 3 years) I ran a dishwasher cleaner through the machine many times which has made things somewhat better but glasses are still foggy. Oh, and I read that putting a bowl of vinegar in the dishwasher can help the foggy glass problem.
The answer to hard water is vinegar.
Next I'm going to clean my irons with vinegar as they don't seem to be as hot as they once were. I'm hoping this will bring them back to the hot temps I had been getting.
The answer to hard water is vinegar.
Next I'm going to clean my irons with vinegar as they don't seem to be as hot as they once were. I'm hoping this will bring them back to the hot temps I had been getting.
#43
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 9,714
This is the iron I will get next. This is a dry steam iron.https://reliablecorporation.com/coll...o-iron-station. Several of these to choose from on the website.
#44
I'm just realizing what hard water can do to things. My glasses are all foggy from the dishwater. Then the the dishwasher didn't seem to be doing everything right. Once I learned about hard water(have only lived here 3 years) I ran a dishwasher cleaner through the machine many times which has made things somewhat better but glasses are still foggy. Oh, and I read that putting a bowl of vinegar in the dishwasher can help the foggy glass problem.
The answer to hard water is vinegar.
Next I'm going to clean my irons with vinegar as they don't seem to be as hot as they once were. I'm hoping this will bring them back to the hot temps I had been getting.
The answer to hard water is vinegar.
Next I'm going to clean my irons with vinegar as they don't seem to be as hot as they once were. I'm hoping this will bring them back to the hot temps I had been getting.
#45
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Live Oak, Texas
Posts: 6,133
I have had my Rowenta for twenty three years and have never had any problems with it. I have bought several others and didn't keep any of them. Living in the San Antonia area we have the hardest water in the world and that is what I have always used. I do now use the filtered water from my ref. I got afraid of it when I read here about fires and was going to replace it but so far I haven't found one I like better. I do run vinegar through it to clean out the lime buildup when needed as I do with everything here with our problem here.
#46
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: California, USA
Posts: 1,318
Rowenta irons were good about 25 years ago, before they started making their water tank parts in plastic. One drop of the iron and that was the end of the water tank. Even if you didn't drop the iron, eventually they started leaking. After using my first Rowenta iron for over 20+ years and it finally fizzled out, my next 2 Rowenta irons were a dud. They are too expensive to have them die untimely deaths. I just recently purchased a really cheap iron from Walmart because I forgot to bring mine with me on a quilting retreat, that doesn't turn off automatically, and it has been wonderful. I just put the iron on the same circuit that the lamp is on and turn both lamp and iron off at the same time. Now I know if my light is on, so is my iron. It has been great not having to wait for the iron to heat up every time I need it.
#48
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Chula Vista CA
Posts: 7,401
I have the Shark Professional, had it over a year now and at first I used filtered water in it, but decided to go back to using the spray bottle to avoid the iron from leaking. I love weight of the iron and how hot it gets. My other irons that were a lower wattage just didn't get hot enough.
#49
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Central Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA
Posts: 7,695
I have the same one, no water, I have a dollar store spray bottle I use instead. I had a beautiful “Quiana “ (remember that?) and my nice expensiveiron, the brand of which I have forgotten spit rust water all over it, and destroyed it. Nothing ever washed out of that fabric did it? Cheap irons and spray bottles for me.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
craftybear
Links and Resources
15
04-07-2013 02:59 AM
Deb watkins
General Chit-Chat (non-quilting talk)
69
03-17-2011 09:52 AM
craftybear
Links and Resources
14
11-28-2010 09:07 AM