Submitted by greatestzim t3_yfrad3 in BuyItForLife

Hi folks,

For this Christmas, I want to get my parents an iron that they will have for a long time. The challenge is that they need an iron that can survive very hard water and regular use. They have a motel in a remote, rural area, and they can’t afford to keep buying ‘iron water’ for the insane amount of things they iron on a regular basis.

It might sound be a bit too ambitious, but is there a brand/model of iron people on this sub have that has been by their side for a long time? Thanks

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FSmertz t1_iu4txk8 wrote

Rowenta irons are very high quality--some are commercial quality. I've had a Rowenta for 10 years with zero issues. This model bills itself as dealing with hard water:

https://www.rowentausa.com/LINEN-CARE/STEAM-IRONS/Everlast-Anti-Calc-Steam-Iron/p/1110030969?scc=steam%2birons

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greatestzim OP t1_iu4vay6 wrote

This is a brill suggestion, thanks for sharing! Looks like something that would be great for them

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12thMemory t1_iu4va58 wrote

Is there a reason they haven’t bought a water softener? Without sorting out the hard water problem, everything that utilizes water is going to face a shorter life due to scaling, from the deposited minerals.

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Quail-a-lot t1_iu4x3ih wrote

I'm going to second this. They don't need to soften all of the hotel's water, but it sounds like they could really use it at least for the maintenance room. It will also make their dishwasher and washing machine work better and use less soap! Once you have the softener, salt is cheap.

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greatestzim OP t1_iu52v2e wrote

That’s a good idea, I’ll look into that option as well, thanks!

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Quail-a-lot t1_iu53hyo wrote

Tell them it will help make the sheets come out whiter! (They will still need bleaching, but I know with water like that, they still got dingy even with it)

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con40 t1_iu5112r wrote

Buy them a water softener instead. Losing battle if the iron has an internal reservoir

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Muncie4 t1_iu6v5tb wrote

Some people here chose not to READ your question. I did because good guy. T-Fal sells irons which contain a zinc anode which aids in the use of hard water. T-Fal is also pretty well knows as a good BIFL brand here but without the fanfare of the legion Rowenta. I use my T-Fal with zinc anode and distilled water because I'm so fancy I wear two monocles.

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DudeFromMiami t1_iu4t79d wrote

Let me know you find, have had Rowenta which sucked, and a Philips which is good but the spray button gets stuck down since it was new which blows.

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Huckleberry181 t1_iu6s3hi wrote

Seconding or thirding the water softener suggestion.. I dealt with hard water at my house for way too long, just installed a softener & filter about a month ago and it's been a revelation.. the water tastes better, showers feel better, all of our skin & hairs are doing better, AND no more annoying deposits to deal with!

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