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No hay artículos en el carroPeter B
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 8 de febrero de 2025
Little on the smaller side for the price expected it to be larger but works great and keeps making ice regularly. Only reason it’s not 5 stars is because the hose on the back needs to be on the ground to drain, won’t pump it up.
Néstor azahel acuna rivera
Comentado en México el 8 de abril de 2025
Vienen muy bien, calidad buena y prácticos.
Isaias B.
Comentado en México el 20 de noviembre de 2024
No tienen el hoyo del tornillo que los mantiene en su lugar
jocadizv
Comentado en México el 27 de julio de 2023
No ajustan a bajo Yamaha
Smax4Life
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de julio de 2023
First off i would say this product is a Great Value and I 100% recommend it. The company is awesome to work with. The price went down a couple days after i bought ours...They gladly refunded us the difference when i sent them a message.I fish all summer and constantly need ice. After Costco hiked the ice prices by 250% i started shopping used commercial machines on craigslist. I decided to give this a shot before i spent $2k on a beat up old restaurant machine....I'm glad i did. This machine is compact, light weight, easy to set up. Could easily be brought on a camping trip or to a hotel (If they dont have ice). I bought the $40 in-line filter and spend another $20 to Tee into the connection of my wash sink. So far So good.Here are a couple considerations i would have found helpful going in;1. It makes ice faster than i anticipated. Awesome!2. It does need some significant drainage. I roto-hammered a 3/4" hole through my garage slab because i know i have 25 yards of drain rock under it. Whiskey Tango move but it works.3. ***I think the only "Con" to this Item*** I weighed the 3 -"Ten pound" bags of ice i get out of the bin (when it shuts off) and they are between 7-8# each.**********When you wake up you will have ~25# of ice to use***********I've even broken the ice up in the bin as it comes out and it only gets another 1-2# yield.With the machine unplugged i bet you can fit 33# in it but it doesn't make and store 33#.We fill bags with ice whenever we can. We store them in a freezer. I have no doubt the machine will make 100#+ in a 24 hour cycle. But If you need the bin capacity I would consider buying the next one up.
IFS
Comentado en México el 13 de junio de 2023
Quedaron geniales en una guitarra eléctrica viajera que tengo, muy discretos y del tamaño exacto. Además vienen con su llave Hexagonal.
Brion Peter Adderley
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de junio de 2023
No se pudo cargar el contenido.
Eduardo Galvan
Comentado en México el 5 de octubre de 2023
las perillas no embonaron con los poteoncimetros y de mala calidad
Benn
Comentado en México el 1 de octubre de 2023
Llegaron a tiempo y de calidad
R. Reed
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 9 de agosto de 2020
I’ve had my Euhomy ice machine for 6 months now and I love it. This machine replaced a previous ice machine in my home bar where I already had the water supply and drain in place. The Euhomy’s included water supply line seemed cheap and flimsy so I bought an adapter at Lowe’s and upgraded to a stainless braided hose. You WILL need a drain! This machine generates ice fairly quickly but its storage bin is not a freezer and therefore melts over time (speed depends on your environment). Without a drain your bin will turn into a swimming pool as the ice melts. The drain is gravity fed so your drain system must be BELOW the Euhomy’s drain line (located just a few inches above the bottom of the machine) or you can purchase and install a small drain pump to push the water upward to a sink drain pipe. I built a short riser for my machine to sit on, raising it and subsequently its drain outlet 4 inches higher allowing it to align with my existing wall drain system.If I run the machine continuously, it will cut itself off when filled with ice (fresh batch every 10-15 min.) Then it will turn itself back on as needed to replace any melting ice and keep itself full. If I know I won’t need ice for a few days and manually turn it off, all the ice will have melted within about 12 hours (machine is located inside my home with the A/C set around 75).Some reviewers have complained about ice being melty or wet, and melting very quickly. There is a simple menu screen adjustment on the front for how “hard” you want the ice cubes to be (read the instructions because the hardness setting numbering system didn’t seem obvious to me). Even on the hardest setting, the ice does seem to melt in my drink faster than ice from my freezer. But for me it’s not a problem. Again, this is not a freezer so there is no way to keep the ice super cold after it drops into the bin.Some reviews complain that when the cubes drop they don’t break apart but rather stay together in sheets. What I’ve found is that when I set it to freeze “hard”, the fist batches that drop all the way to the bin’s floor will break apart. But as the ice piles up and fills the bin, the newest batches only fall a few inches inches landing on top of the pile and don’t usually break apart. But I keep a stainless kitchen meat mallet in the bar and a few light taps on the pile of ice and they easily break apart.I read at least one review that claimed the machine he received wasn’t stainless and was in fact ugly white plastic. All I can say is mine came with a protective white plastic wrap that I had to peel off to reveal the stainless. My wife placed a magnetic hook on the front for the ice shovel. Now while I’m no scientist, it is my understanding that magnets won’t stick to stainless soooo… I’m not sure if it’s actually stainless steel but it IS metal and it LOOKS like stainless.It does make a little noise as some complain, but I hardly notice anymore and my bar is in the middle of the house just feet from my living room. Once it’s full, it only kicks on a few times through out day for about 10 min.Overall, it works perfectly for me. I paid $399 with free shipping and got it within a few days. It was packed very well and runs perfectly. (I did get an error code once but a quick power off and back on… no more trouble). Be ready to clean it every so often as you should any appliance. I would absolutely recommend this ice machine for any home as long as you understand that the ice bin is not a freezer (mediocre cooler at best).
S. Lewis
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de noviembre de 2020
This product is certainly "easy to install". I put that in quotes, since you need a water line coming in, and a drain line going out. It's very easy, in that it just plugs into your power outlet (no hard wiring), but if you aren't particularly handy you might need a plumber to run those lines for you. But it's not a complicated install either way.Some things to note, and none of these are 'knocks' on the Euhomy, this is the way all ice makers in this category operate, but if you're just getting one for the first time for your house, maybe you didn't know.1) The bin where the ice is stored is just a bin. Ice in there will slowly melt over time. Only the part of the machine where the ice is made is chilled. This is probably a good thing for you. It makes this product much more affordable, and it is friendlier to your electric bill.2) You need three things - a power outlet (regular 110V), a water line coming in (same as your refrigerator's ice maker needed), and a drain line coming out - remember that bin? When ice melts, it becomes water. That will pool on the floor, or you can run the line and remove the water. Do that. ;)In my case, we installed it in our garage. It's not obnoxiously loud, but if you put it in your kitchen, you WILL hear the condenser come on as it's making ice. It sits about 6 feet from our hot water heater, so we had a relatively easy install, we had a guy tap that water line for the heater, and run it also to the Euhomy. Voila, ice coming in! We installed a water filter in between the water line and the ice maker, because filtration!For the drain line, there was no way to get it safely outside my garage floor without a condensate pump. All ice makers like this rely on a gravity drain. If the drain line runs DOWN, gravity will ensure the water leaves. The further you run that line, the less likely you can keep it sloping downward. So any local big box hardware store will sell for under $100 a water condensate pump. Run the line to the pump, and then from the pump to a place where it's safe for water to go, and you're good to go. Our line from the ice maker to the pump is a downward slope, and the pump has a float, then when it floats that means enough water is in the unit, and it pumps it out of our house. Get a good pump, the cheap ones fail relentlessly. Our same plumber ran that line right next to where the water heater's exit line was, drilled a small hole, and boom - all my melted ice water flows safely to the grass outside my garage.One last thing... I'll say it again. If you need a condensate pump, buy a good one. The first one we had died really quick. The cheap ones are very cheap, and being in the garage didn't help (the motor overheated). We knew it failed right away, there was puddle of water on the floor one morning, and the unit was very hot. It had a small fan near the power supply that burned out within a month of installation. I bought a much better pump, and have had no problems yet. It also has a float-less design (one less thing to get 'stuck') and lots of indicators. Don't spend $400-500 on a ice maker, and possibly $200-400 on a plumber and then stick a cheap pump in there. Get a good pump if you need it!Because it's in a garage, and because that garage is in South Florida, I did use the timer feature to let it "freeze" ice longer. I have it set to +4 - which basically means it freezes the ice an additional four minutes before dropping it in the bin. The ice was a little to "soft" with some unfrozen water in the middle of the cube otherwise. Depending on where your ice maker is, you might not need that drastic an adjustment. It still makes ice really quick and really often.The ONLY other quirk is... it's rainy season in Florida. We get a lot of thunderstorms, and our power likes to blip out for a minute or two sometimes. This unit will NOT turn itself back on. So some morning I walk in, and the bin is less than full because the power in the house went out briefly. Push the power button, reset my timer to +4 and I'm good to go. I wish it had an auto-power feature to turn itself back on. I may add a small UPS to avoid the power interruptions, and to prolong the life on the unit.
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