I have another concern about Sears Distiller.  Someone mentioned before
that dirty, yellowish water was left after the distillation process which 
smelled awful. I totally agree with him because I smelled it.

However, I wonder whether the yellow color does not come from the metal,
not the water?  This question occurred to me after I tried to clean the
metal container with apple cider vinegar : water mixture and with
lemon-water mixture.  I did this to try to get rid of the "burnt taste" of
the water. When I used the lemon-water mixture and left it in the metal
container for about 2 days, the water turned a "rotten yellow" color. It
smelled also, though the smell may have come from bacterial contamination. 

Did any of you have a similar result, whereby contaminants were leached
out of the metal?  Or was this simply bacterial growth in the lemon-water
mixture?  The lemon-water seemed very effective in cleaning the metal
container, though I still don't like the taste of the water.  (However,
most of the burnt tast is gone.)  I want to thank whoever sent me the
suggestion to use lemon-water to clean the stainless steel container.  It
was very effective.

Regards,
:)  Joyce 

P.S.  If any of you wrote me and didn't receive a reply, please re-send
the email. My server was rejecting my email for a period of several weeks,
and I did not receive any email during that period.  Thank you.


On Thu, 17 Sep 1998, Tai-Pan wrote:

> Dean Woodward wrote:
> > 
> > I have observed a potentially serious problem, at least in the Sears
> > water distiller which I have.
> > 
> > The problem: When the unit is plugged in the entire inner stainless
> > steel container carries full line voltage. I measured the voltage from
> > the water inside the shell to ground (stainless kitchen sink) and it
> > was 123 volts ac.
> > 
> > In normal use this may not be a problem, as the plastic outer case of
> > the distiller insulates the inner container. However, if the unit is
> > left plugged in while refilling it there could be serious risk.
> > 
> > I don't know if this is a general problem, or just a problem with my
> > unit. I intend to ask Sears that question.
> > 
> > Meantime, be aware of a potential safety risk!
> > 
> > All the best,
> > Dean
> 
>   Hi Dean and list,
>  Checked mine, no problem with it.
>  Mine reads over 400 megohm from each side of plug to steel water pot.
>  Read no voltage when pluged in and turned on, from pot to sink with
> analog meter, 27 millivolt with hi impedance digital meter.
>  Using my fingers, did not feel any electricity while touching the pot
> and sink at same time.
>  Maybe yours has been in water, or has a short in it. Keep in mind this
> distiller is of double insulation construction ,just like the new
> electric drills. A short is not very likely, would require two failures
> at the same time.
>  Could be your wall receptical is miss-wired,thats a common problem
> now-a-days with low skill help on construction jobs.
> 
>   Bless you   Bob Lee
> -- 
> oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
>   [email protected]
> 
> 
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