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..and it's great; boiling water at the touch of a button, makes brewing up a quick doddle. Indeed, if they weren't so expensive I'd consider having one installed at home.
However, I've just watched a woman use the cold water function on it to the fill the kettle, which she then boiled, to make her brew. People, it would seem, are idiots.
{and yes, it does raise the question of why there is a kettle in the work kitchen as well as the techno-tap. I have no idea)
Freshly boiled water makes nicer tea.
They claimed that at ours till we did blind taste tests
Not out of a scaled-up kettle it doesn't
they don't quite boil to 100 degrees so your tea doesn't brew quite right and they don't have a big enough tank to provide more than 6 or 7 brews in a row. They are useless for anything more intensive than a cheshire show home. That woman is cleverer than you will ever know, if i could still use a kettle at work i would.
We've got a few of these at work - 6-9 months old. 2 of them are now broken and "awaiting engineer".
I'll stick to a kettle at home.
[I]they don't quite boil to 100 degrees so your tea doesn't brew quite right [/I]
In the same way that directional speaker cables improve the sound of your hi-fi
[I]and they don't have a big enough tank to provide more than 6 or 7 brews in a row. [/I]
And how many brews can a single kettleful make?
We have one at work and it's fantastic.
Until the filter goes, and then it tastes like hot badger piss (probably)
We have one, and had the usual suspects whining about how it tastes different from a kettle when it was first installed. It was being worked on the other day so we had to go back to a kettle, you'd have thought some folk had had their first-born eaten. People, can't win.
It boils to whatever temperature you set it to (ours is 97' I think). The trick is to run it for a few seconds first to clear what's been standing in the pipe.
We've got a few of these at work - 6-9 months old. 2 of them are now broken and "awaiting engineer".
They're supposed to be serviced regularly. Are you doing that?
they don't quite boil to 100 degrees so your tea doesn't brew quite right
You haven't set it up right then. User error.
(If you have on that is)
Ours is set to full boil, and I challenge anyone to tell that it's made with an instant boil tap in a blind taste test.
Complete guff 😆
- no, I don't work in building services but building services usually do stuff by the bookThey're supposed to be serviced regularly. Are you doing that?
"You" the company not "you" personally.
[i]they don't quite boil to 100 degrees so your tea doesn't brew quite right[/i]
I recall in my last job, my boss saw me making tea directly out of the boiler thingy and made such a comment. So I demonstrated how the kettle boiled [i]immediately[/i] when water out of the boiler thingy was added.
I then asked him to compare which was hottest as I poured from one on his left cheek and the other on his right.
[i]People, it would seem, are idiots[/i]
OP's is merely one single example of such a fact.
People at ours do the same.
I will suggest the blind taste test!
Worked in 2 places where the staff where not allowed a kettle, they had to use a central boiler /water ern.
they don't quite boil to 100 degrees
I really hate to be pedantic, but boiling point depends on the atmospheric pressure. If the pressure is too low, it will always boil at less than 100 degrees. If the pressure is too high, it will never boil at 100 degrees. Adjusting a thermostat won't change this.
Whatever happened to ladies with tea trolleys?
Only the kwooker delivers water at 100degs I believe, although I imagine that by the time it hits the cup its already dropped a couple. can't imagine a couple of degrees either way makes any difference to a cup of tea, seeing as its sat with a tea bag cooling for the 'ideal' 40 secs brewing time. 😕
You can't skive as long if you don't have to wait for the kettle to boil though, eh?
cheshire show home.
Or Sunny Brentwood
We've got one ..... 😳
I was skeptical when the Mrs wanted it, but it's rather good... great for rinsing pasta/rice.
Cougar has it right ... let it blast out the cooler water in the pipe first
I use the one at my work to fill my aeropress. What kind of a monster does that make me!?
I really hate to be pedantic,
no you don't you loves you do 😆
As I recall, perfect tea is made with water at lower than 100 degrees, anyway...
There's no such thing as pefect tea. Everyone has differing tastes 😛
What teabags for instaboilerthingies???? <flee runaway flee>
The majority of the people at work still use the kettle claiming it makes a better brew. I use the boiler tap when it is my tea round and nobody notices the difference.
Only the kwooker delivers water at 100degs I believe
Our ZpTap does.
There's one at an office I visit that does boiled, chilled and fizzy.
FIZZY. 😯
It's the future and I want in.
There's one at an office I visit that does boiled, chilled and fizzy.
Whatever they sell, they're clearly charging too much for it.
hols2 - Memberthey don't quite boil to 100 degrees
I really hate to be pedantic, but boiling point depends on the atmospheric pressure. If the pressure is too low, it will always boil at less than 100 degrees. If the pressure is too high, it will never boil at 100 degrees. Adjusting a thermostat won't change this.
Surely adjusting the thermostat to compensate for the different boiling temp will achieve just that?
Surely it can't actually be boiling water or there would lots of steam being produced.
Reusing boiled water isn't suppossed to be a good idea as the concentration of things like aluminum increases over time.
So maybe by not boiling the water these things avoid that.
Anyway I decided not to risk it at home.
Plus I couldn't get one to match my dualit toaster, whereas I could get a matching Dualit kettle.
Bought one of these for my Father in Law after he had a stroke, It is excellent, not quite as hot as a kettle but not bad. We have the Zip taps at work. Less impressed and high maintenance.
[img] http://media.4rgos.it/i/Argos/4230429_R_Z001A?$Web$&w=1240&h=1116 [/img]
They installed a Zip tap where I used to work, and it was great when it worked, but it did seem to break down fairly often, but then, the kettles broke with monotonous regularity, and they previously had one of those large hot water urn things, which nobody took responsibility for keeping filled up, so it used to dry out, the element would self-destruct, and it cost £250 each time to fix it!
Our runs at 94 degrees way too hot for coffee. Have to let stand a bit before filling the Aeropress.
I sometimes have to visit the US office where they have things like this. But being America they have no idea about how to make tea, so these useless machines just produce fairly warm water which results in rubbish tea. Also not helped by them buying very expensive but rubbish tea bags.
Moral, if going to the US, avoid tea and drink beer instead.
Although there are problems with that as well.
I live in Colorado. The house is at 7200 feet (92 degree boiling point), and I work at 5000 feet (95 degree boiling point). The tea tastes the same either way. The only noticeable difference between here and home (Devon) is that the water tastes much different, and tea gets much colder much quicker here in Colorado.
[s]if going to the US,[/s] avoid tea and drink beer instead.
Fixed it for you
they don't quite boil to 100 degrees so your tea doesn't brew quite right and they don't have a big enough tank to provide more than 6 or 7 brews in a row. They are useless for anything more intensive than a cheshire show home.
I think the staff on D wing at HMP W******* would disagree.
And how many brews can a single kettleful make?
I have a 5 litre kettle how many do you want? 20 minutes to tea mind.
We've got a few of these at work - 6-9 months old. 2 of them are now broken and "awaiting engineer".
Yes ours break down with monotonous regularity. Almost as much as the computers.
That woman is cleverer than you will ever know, if i could still use a kettle at work i would.
She's a fool, I really shouldn't have to explain why, but... There is at least [i]some[/i] rather hot water available; stick that in the kettle + some cold = cleverer.
Quooker here. Fills my Aeropress and pan for poached eggs perfectly, what else could you want?
what else could you want?
[s]A bj[/s] world peace
Qooker here too. Definately comes out at 100 degs as it comes out with steam, so a bit of a give away. I believe the temp of the water in The heating flask is higher than boiling as it's under pressure. One of the best gadgets I've bought Kettles are so lame so worth ditching the engineered wood floor for laminate to afford it when we did our extension. Mines 2 years old now and my dads had one for several years more so bullet proof reliability. No scale as scale occurs as the water cools on a heating element.
I have a 5 litre kettle how many do you want? 20 minutes to tea mind.
Pah! Our instant tap at work has an 11 litre tank.
So there. 😆