T-Fal BF6520004 Vitesse 1.7L Electric Kettle


Great electric kettle design!5

I spent hours researching every electric kettle available (and looking at them in person in stores) before settling on this one. I've owned it for about 6 months now and it's been great. The concealed heating element and the simple one-piece plastic jug design make it very easy to clean (not that I've needed to) and leak resistant (I assume from a design perspective since mine has no leaks yet). The only way it could leak is if the grommet sealing the metal bottom piece to the plastic jug developed a leak whereas most of the stainless steel kettles being sold have several parts many seams and thus many places a leak could develop. There is some mild browning of the plastic inside the jug I suppose a reaction to the high heat. This same thing happened with my roommate's older plastic electric kettle so it's to be expected. People complain about plastic vs. stainless steel I settled on plastic for one primary reason: it is a better insulator so not only will it keep the water hotter for longer it will be safer to handle in general (ie. it won't burn you or a child if it is accidentally picked up by its sides while it contains hot water). People complain about plastic "leeching chemicals" into the water I haven't noticed any difference in taste personally and I doubt stainless steel would be much "safer" than plastic in this respect. The switch works great and mine has never spilled water or over-boiled it (as long as it contains the minimum recommended amount of water). The spout and handle shapes make it easy to pour and the locking top makes it pretty tough to spill. Definitely recommended I'm buying another one for my parents right now.



PS - While researching electric kettles I frequently saw complaints of how kettles designed for use in the USA don't heat water as fast as those in the UK. This is for a very simple reason: UK uses 240 volt power USA uses 120 volts. Most electrical receptacles are rated for 15 amps (though the kitchen are often has at least two 20-amp circuits per NEC recommendations). Watts = volts * amps which means that UK kettles can get up to 240 volts * 15 amps = 3600 watts while USA kettles can get up to 120 volts * 15 amps = 1800 watts. Manufacturers might sometimes avoid approaching this limit perhaps due to safety or liability issues? Just note that this 1750 watt Tfal kettle is very close to the typical USA receptacle wattage rating. It's just about as high as you'll be able to get in the USA...most other USA electric kettles only go up to 1500 watts.More detail ...

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