Thursday, November 10, 2011

SteamFast SF-140 1000-Watt Hard-Floor Steam Mop

SF-140 Steam Mop is the modern replacement for messy, inconvenient mops, and allows consumers to clean and sanitize hard floor surfaces with the power of steam, 1000 watts power steam, 8-oz water capacity, 12 minutes of cleaning and sanitizing steam time, 3-minute heat-up, 4 accessories, Quickly & safely care for a wide variety of hard floor surface floors, Swiveling handle increases control and mobility, ETL Listed, 1 year limited warranty.

Amazon Sales Rank: #58754 in Home Color: Blue Brand: SteamFast Model: SF-140 Number of items: 1 Dimensions: 49.00" h x 7.00" w x 11.80" l, 6.10 pounds 1000-watt steam mop for cleaning and sanitizing hard-floor surfaces Uses tap water; no chemicals required; foot-controlled on/off switch Heats up in minutes; delivers up to 10 minutes of steam; swivel handle Telescopic pole; 2 micro-fiber cloths, a fill cup, and a resting pad included Measures 11-4/5 by 7 by 49 inches; 1-year limited warranty

Most helpful customer reviews 664 of 672 people found the following review helpful. The Steam Mop SHOWDOWN: I've done the product comparisons for you... By Chandler (update: This review was updated on 11-2-09 after I got to compare the Bissell as well as add notes about the Ladybugg steamer at the bottom, and then on 11-30 when I got to compare the SteamFast SF-140) I live in a neighborhood where EVERY home is "green built certified" this means that, to have that certification, the builder built no homes with carpet. All the main floors are polished concrete and the upper floors wood. The bathrooms all have tile and/or slate in every home. Because of this, as you could imagine, steam mops are quite the neccessity...not only because they get the hard surfaces better than anything else, but because they are also "green" and clean chemical free. I'll be honest, for us...that's a bonus but we weren't cleaning chemical free before. We like chemical free for our pet's paws but I'll confess I was mopping with chemicals before I got my steamer and just kept the pets out of the room while doing it because, up until then, I couldn't get it clean any other way. Okay, so that said...we decided to have a steamer show down to compare 6 different steamers because my friends and I knew as long as we are in these homes we are gonna have to have a steamer to get all these hard floors clean...we may as well figure out which one to buy next go round. Because my own home is graced with 2 cats, 3 dogs, and two gregarious cooks, my kitchen floor (which had not ever been cleaned by a steamer since my steamer had just arrived) was the testing spot. Mind you, I vaccuum twice per week and do a mega mop twice a week. I THOUGHT I had pretty clean floors in spite of my pet capacity. I thought wrong. These picked up dirt so well it's scary So here's the results: 1. steam mops are the mac daddys of clean floors. What these things picked up was tremendous and no comparison to my vigorous prior constant major mopping. 2. So now I'll break down the elements of each mop we used and then go into more detail about each at the end. We tried out: "S": The shark by Europro "E" The Envirosteamer by Eureka "H" the haan steamer "M" the Monster "B" The Bissell Green Tea "SF" The SteamFast SF-140 by SteamFast CORD LENGTH: so you don't have to stop and unplug and replug in somewhere else: Shark ( will be referred to as S):20 feet Envirosteamer (will be referred to as E): 25 feet Haan: (will be referred to as H)19'8" Monster (will be referred to as M): 25 feet Bissell (will be referred to as B) 17 feet SteamFast (will be referred to as SF): 18.7 ft. STEAM TEMPERATURE: this is a primary element. The hotter the steam, the more dirt picked up and hot steam will also kill parasites, mold and mildew and loosen more dirt: S 110 degrees. lame E 220 degrees. very hot H 212 degrees. very hot M 266 degrees. hottest...although the envirosteamer and haan seemed plenty hot enough. The shark didn't clean nearly as well and this was one reason. 110 degrees just isn't going to melt off stuck on grime. B 125 degrees. Note that, because of this low steam temperature the manual said that if I wanted to sanitize the floor or pick up caked on spills, I had to hold the steamer on the spot for 15 seconds but no more than 20 because that could damage some floors. Now I don't know about you, but if I can sanitize with one swipe of the other steamers because of their sanitizing temps my floor will be done WAY faster but I don't have a timer to worry about the extra 5 secons where my wood floors could get damaged. My sink water is hotter than this so it would take less time to use a regular mop if I have to hold the steamer on every spot of my floor for 15 seconds to santize. Just sayin SF: 137 degrees. Not hot enough to clean well and sanitize. BUILD: We found how it was made corresponded with issues with the steamer. The Shark, for example, was quite flimsy and they actually sell replacement

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