I see posts talking about good BIFL items but I don’t hear much about the other side of products that are bad or products you bought but don’t even use.

  • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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    4 months ago

    Damn I’d ask if you are me but I absolutely love my cast iron skillet cause it’s the most nonstick pan in my house and I cook plenty. I have 2.

    Humidifier, I found it easier to have one of those old school plastic water pitchers next to my humidifier that I can use to fill it up or keep a refill immediately nearby if I know I’m gonna use it all day and a little splash of bleach every now and again actually does a lot for cleaning it out on its own. But it sits empty a lot still.

    Shark robo vacuum and Anker’s Eufy lines can die by fire. Both suck for completely different reasons and I have wasted so much money and I so wish I hadn’t accidentally lit on fire the like 3rd gen iRobot my grandmother gifted me because it was so “dumb” it was the only one that worked.

    • @FoD@startrek.website
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      24 months ago

      Confirmed here too. I HATE my shark vac bot. So many reasons and I have two of them unfortunately, each with different problems.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        24 months ago

        It’s insane how full of problems they are and yet how insistent they are that problems are somehow rare.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        34 months ago

        Oh, I mean, I still love stainless steel and it’s all my other cookware because it’s the only other perfect answer.

        Non stick. Can be scrubbed clean, can be thrown in an oven at insane temps if you don’t have any plastic or other materials on it. Silicone can still be at like 450.

        Seriously, the plain boring non fancy stuff is the stuff that lasts forever and does the same result every time.

    • @cordlesslamp
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      14 months ago

      About the bleach, wouldn’t it just evaporates into the air and be toxic/bad for your health?

      I’m also sick of cleaning my humidifier.

      I’m planning to buy an evaporative humidifier, dump a kilo of sea salt in it so nothing can grow. As the water vaporize, all the salt will be remain for the next refill (as salt doesn’t evaporate with the water). I wonder if it would work as I can’t find anything on Google.

      • @saigot@lemmy.ca
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        24 months ago

        About the bleach, wouldn’t it just evaporates into the air

        Nope, bleach is Sodium hypochlorite, if left to dry only the water it’s diluted in will evaporate leaving behind bleach crystals. Over time it will decompose into table salt. That doesn’t sound the best for the humidifier, but it won’t be a danger to the air.

      • @Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        4 months ago

        Well if you have ever been to a pool you are breathing in a pretty heavy dose of chloramine and depending on where you live there is likely chlorine in your tap water. I’ve even had to wash my veggies and fruits in bleach water because of parasites. It’s not exactly healthy for you but it’s not exactly harmful as long as you don’t do anything stupid. It’s a cleaning agent.

        I’m using about a teaspoon for a gallon of water and actually settled on using a pre-diluted mixture in a spray bottle and just spray some in when I see it getting moldy again. Which is to say I also only do it like once a month to 2 weeks and try to do it before leaving the room or house for a bit to let it run without me immediately breathing in.

        The other recommendation would be hydrogen peroxide since it breaks down a lot faster into just water anyways but it’s slightly less effective and less easy to just have on hand.

        Salt seems like a terrible idea. I have super duper soft water with nothing in it but some basic calcium… Calcium powder is always settled all around my humidifier. And nearby glass surfaces. It will carry some salt with it, guaranteed. Plus I see it clogging important mechanisms or pores.

      • @Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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        14 months ago

        I use a little splash of vinegar. Keeps it nice and clean without the whole chlorine gas part.

        (I don’t know if bleach produces chlorine gas. Talking out my ass on that part)

        • @cordlesslamp
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          14 months ago

          I tried using vinegar. My entire house smells vinegar for like a week.