86 of 86 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Does the Job With Minimal Waste of Space, August 28, 2010
This review is from: RediBreeze Oral Irrigator dental water jet (Health and Beauty)
I am so glad to find an oral irrigator that takes up so little space and is so simple! I had one like this many years ago and lost it during a move. Since then, all I could find on store shelves is the waterpik, which is bulky, clumsy and WAY overengineered for what it does. The Redi Breeze works well, is easy to install and doesn't clutter up my sink with unnecessary paraphanalia. I took this out of the package and had it installed within 5 minutes without any tools.
I keep my Redi Breeze in my downstairs bathroom since I already have a waterpik in my master bath. Both this item and the waterpik do a similar job (I like them both), but there are a few differences:
1. RESERVOIR. The waterpik has a reservoir, which is nice for adding medications to the irrigation water - I like to add mouthwash or hydorgen peroxide to my irrigation water. The Redi Breeze has no reservoir and uses water straight from the faucet, which is nice where space is limited. I prefer the Redi Breeze for this feature, but still like the waterpik's option for adding things to the reservoir.
2. PULSING ACTION. The waterpik has a "pulsing" action and the Redi Breeze doesn't pulse. I don't know if the pulsing actually does anything significant, but it feels kind of nice. I have no preference on this feature, since the pulsing doesn't appear to enhance the unit's cleaning ability.
3. WATER PRESSURE REGULATION. The waterpik automatically regulates the water pressure and the Redi Breeze requires the user to regulate the water pressure manually. Automatic regulation has it's advantages and disadvantages. The advantage of automatic regulation over manual is that it takes the guesswork out of how much pressure you need - not enough pressure will result in the product not working correctly and too much pressure will injure the gums... Redi Breeze users have to learn how much pressure is "just right". The disadvantage of automatic regulation is that sometimes the machine doesn't give enough pressure and the user cannot get more pressure if needed. I prefer the Redi Breeze for this feature.
4. WATER TEMPERATURE. Oral irrigation works best with lukewarm water, and you can regulate the temp on both the Redi Breeze and the waterpik. However, the water pik is a little better with this feature, since you have a reservoir full of water at the perfect temp - with no chance of it changing during irrigation. Just imagine getting your Redi Breeze to the correct temp and while you are flooding your mouth, teeth and gums with warm water, someone in the next bathroom suddenly flushes! YIKES! Your are now squirting tons of high pressure, scalding HOT water into your mouth. Not fun. Waterpiks are the winner on this feature.
Both products are quite messy at first, until the user learns not to squirt water everywhere - and this is harder than you might think. They both get your teeth and gums much MUCH cleaner than brushing and floss. They are both safer than floss, which can cut and irritate gums. They both tend to leak a little bit, but the waterpik leaks more than the Redi Breeze. Both products make my life much easier and I wish I could take one everywhere I go!
ONE WARNING ABOUT THE REDI BREEZE: THE ADAPTER THAT ATTACHES TO YOUR FAUCET IS FAIRLY RELIABLE, BUT CAN GET LOOSE OVER TIME. IT IS SAFEST TO DEVELOP THE HABIT OF CHECKING THE CONNECTION BEFORE EACH TREATMENT. MAKE SURE IT IS ALWAYS TIGHT! IT IS NOT FUN TO HAVE THAT LITTLE METAL CONNECTOR FLY OFF THE FAUCET UNEXPECTEDLY DURING TREATMENT. THE PIECE ITSELF IS LIKE A BULLET, AND WATER GOES EVERYWHERE WHEN IT SHOOTS OFF. THIS IS NEVER A PROBLEM AS LONG AS THE USER CONFIRMS THAT THE CONNECTION IS SOLID AND TIGHT BEFORE EACH USE.
If I had to make a choice, I would go with the Redi Breeze because it is simpler, takes up less space, and uses no electricity. I am glad to have both, because it is convenient to have one upstairs and downstairs. Both do a good job, and the differences are not monumental.
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52 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Blasts everything, including amalgam seals and bondings, September 17, 2010
This review is from: RediBreeze Oral Irrigator dental water jet (Health and Beauty)
On the pro side, this device will flush out all food particles stuck deep in your gums. I was at the point where flossing and brushpicks would not get that chicken or corn skin out of my gums. This product will.
Now for the down side. After using this product for three months, I was getting quite comfortable, too comfortable, and had the pressure up very high. The high pressure got between an inlay and tooth, pressure-blasted the bonding away, and flung the inlay off the tooth. Needless to say, I was shocked and made an appointment for the dentist. Dentist looked at my teeth and found that ten other teeth needed work (I had just seen the dentist three months earlier). Most problems were leaks between the amalgams and the teeth, as if something had blasted them away. He was shocked. I'm still shocked.
Be careful how high you pump the water.
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
great device, but be prepared to buy nonstandard fittings locally, November 28, 2009
This review is from: RediBreeze Oral Irrigator dental water jet (Health and Beauty)
The pros of this great device have been covered amply by other reviewers. For construction and operation, I give this device 5 stars.
It gets 4 stars for a very specific reason--the company did NOT provide the 13/16 adapter in the box as stated above in the product description. When I contacted them, they promptly shipped out a replacement part, BUT when it arrived it was the EXACT SAME too-large 15/16 piece I already had, not the smaller 13/16 adapter I needed.
So, tired of waiting, I got the required adapter at my local plumbing supply store and the device works great!
NOTE: if you have a nonstandard faucet, be prepared to get adapter part(s) locally. My plumbing supply guy said he sees ALOT of these devices and recommends bringing ALL the parts of the Redibreeze in PLUS your faucet's aerator part. Since I had all the parts, he was actually able to find me an adapter that cut out the 15/16 middle connector and made the total device hanging off my faucet one-inch shorter (helpful with our shallow sink).
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