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Countertop Water Distiller, White, Glass Collection

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,565 ratings

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Brand Megahome
Special Feature Durable
Product Dimensions 9"L x 13"W x 9"H
Package Information Bottle
Installation Type Countertop
Power Source Corded Electric
Item Weight 11 Pounds
Upper Temperature Rating 212 Degrees Fahrenheit
UPC 471986196009
Manufacturer Megahome
Material
Stainless Steel, Plastic
Capacity
1 Gallons
Included Components
Complete Distiller body, glass collection container See more
Purification Method
Distillation

About this item

  • YOUR SAFETY COMES FIRST: This Megahome distiller is UL (Underwriters Laboratory) approved. UL is the trusted independent global safety science company for US products, and determines product compliance with stringent safety standards. PLEASE NOTE: For fire safety, many home insurance policies require that electrical products installed in the home be UL certified. Megahome distillers are one of the only UL approved water distillers available.
  • PUREST WATER: Distills 1 gallon every 5.5 hours. Distills the water at 212 degrees Fahrenheit which is the proper temperature for removing unwanted toxins and contaminants. It also includes 6 (optional use) high quality activated charcoal filters. The optional filters are used when VOCs like chlorine or other toxins that can form into a vapor are present. The filters capture and remove these toxins during the distillation process.
  • BEST QUALITY: Full 304 stainless steel interior, including the boil chamber, upper steam dome, and stainless condensing coils. Water does not touch plastic.
  • GLASS COLLECTION: This distiller includes a durable Glass collection bottle. This ensures the purest and safest distilled water for all of your needs.
  • BEST SERVICE INCLUDED: Every Megahome distiller is backed by a 1 year warranty against defects in manufacture. A detailed description of warranty coverage can be obtained in the Owner's Manual or by reaching out to Nutriteam Support. The service and support is what you would expect from a top quality appliance company. Customer service is provided for the lifetime of the unit. Megahome distillers have been on the market for over 22 years and are the top selling distiller in the world.

Product Description

MH943 Glass

Product Description

This Megahome MH943TWS completes 1 gallon of pure steam distilled water in 5.5 hours. The interior boil chamber, including upper cover and condensing coils are high grade 304 Stainless Steel. It comes with a 1 gallon glass collection bottle with a removable lid for convenience. Distilling your own water can't get any easier, simply fill the boil chamber with water and press the reset button. At the end of the cycle, the distiller will turn off automatically. The outside body of this distiller is a heavy duty metal with an attractive white baked enamel finish.

What's Included:

  • Top Condensing Unit
  • Distiller Body
  • Glass Collection Bottle
  • Activated Charcoal Sachets, 1 package of 6 filters (approximately a 6 month supply)
  • Cleaner for Boil Chamber, 8oz
  • Main Power Cord
  • Porcelain Nozzle Insert

This distiller is 110-120 volt for use in the U.S. and Canada.

Join The Distilled Water Revolution

Human Body

Green

Doctor

simplicity

You Are 70% Water

  • Think Clearer
  • Perform Better
  • Feel Awesome

Planet Friendly

  • Eliminate Single-use Plastic Bottles From Your Life
  • Costs Only .25-30 cents/gal
  • Reduces Your Carbon Footprint

Doctor Recommended

  • Removes 99-99.9% of Impurities
  • Helps Eliminate Toxins
  • Water That Actually Tastes Great

Simplicity At It's Best

  • Simple and Durable
  • Intuitive Design
  • Safe, Sensible, and User-friendly

UL Listed

MH943
How Distillation Works

Your water is brought to 212 degrees (boiling point) which kills bacteria, parasites etc. As steam rises, it leaves behind the impurities and enters the stainless steel cooling coils where the steam is cooled and recondensed into pure water.

Megahome Distillers Are Rigorously Tested For Your Safety

The Megahome water distiller is UL listed (Underwriters Laboratory) and approved. Every Megahome unit is built and tested to ensure safety and longevity. Included is a high temperature thermostat to prevent overheating and ensure automatic shut-off. For over twenty years, Megahome has specialized in manufacturing only water distillers, putting their focus on quality and consumer satisfaction. Megahome is now the most widely distributed distiller in the world.

What makes Meghome distillers different from the competition?

  1. Megahome Corp. has been manufacturing it's countertop water distillers since 1992. It is the only product they manufacture. Needless to say 27 years of producing and refining a product, equals a great company and a great product.
  2. Megahome Corp. has a personal relationship with all of it's parts suppliers. Megahome builds, inspects, and tests every distiller by hand. This ensures consistent quality for each unit. That means consumers can count on getting a top quality unit every time.
  3. Megahome Corp. conforms to the needs of it's customers. Megahome distillers pass all safety standards for the countries and voltage they are destined for. In the United states, UL (Underwriters Laboratory) is the top safety standard for all appliances and Megahome passes UL standards year after year. Unfortunately most of the distillers available on the market today do not pass UL or other US safety standards, and although inexpensive, are simply not safe. In addition to passing safety standards, Megahome Corp listens to the voice of it's customers and continuously makes adjustments to make the most reliable and loved countertop distillers.
  4. Megahome distillers have been carefully constructed to produce the purest steam distilled water. Did you know that all distilled water is not the same? The process of distilling is of course simple and straight forward, bring the water to a boil and then capture and collect the steam that rises. However, distilling at the right temperature, with the correct size condensing coils, and the proper cooling are all essential to producing pure distilled water. Many cheaper distillers boast a faster distilling time but as a result produce an inferior distilled water with more impurities being pushed through the machine because they are boiling too hard and not properly condensing the steam. If you are using your distilled water in equipment it is especially important to make sure that you are in fact producing pure water.

Product information

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Megahome Countertop Water Distiller, White, Glass Collection


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Important information

Safety Information

Keep out of reach from children. Use only on smooth, level surface. Make sure cords are fully inserted.

Directions

Manually fill the stainless steel chamber.5.5 hours later it will automatically shut-off when a gallon of pure water is distilled into the glass container.

Legal Disclaimer

Item sold as is (brand new in original unopened box).


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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
1,565 global ratings

Customers say

Customers like the water purification unit for its ease of cleaning, taste, and build quality. They mention it works well, is simple to use, and removes any residual chemicals. Some appreciate the value for money and water quality. However, some customers differ on the noise level.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

323 customers mention "Works well"303 positive20 negative

Customers are satisfied with the water purification unit. They mention it works well, runs perfectly, and dependable for CPAP, nasal irrigation, and other purposes.

"...The distiller works very well with little oversight or interaction needed, though it needs occasional descaling and rinsing, and you must be careful..." Read more

"...This works brilliantly but needs to be mounted in something since it does not have an enclosure of its own...." Read more

"...It looks perfect, and everything works wonderfully. I put everything together, and made my first pitcher of water next to my first distiller...." Read more

"...little more crude than having it built in, but nonetheless, works flawlessly every time...." Read more

238 customers mention "Taste"197 positive41 negative

Customers like the taste of the water purification unit. They mention it tastes good, is slightly sweeter, and has a lot of sediment.

"...We noticed that the "pre-filtered" distilled water tastes better, as the pitcher style water filter uses activated charcoal to filter water..." Read more

"...distilled along with the water; in practice this makes distilled drinking water taste better. The assembly snaps off to change the packet...." Read more

"...Pretty straight forward. I didn't use the carbon filter and the water tasted good but i'm going to see the difference after a couple of cycles and..." Read more

"...It tastes great. A visitor to my home recently commented on how good the water tastes...." Read more

235 customers mention "Ease of cleaning"209 positive26 negative

Customers find the water purification unit easy to clean. They mention it removes any residual chemicals and mineral deposits in the bottom of the distiller. Some say harmful heavy metals are removed.

"...It is quite simple and easy to clean the upper section: Remove the three screws (gently pry back the rubber sealing ring to expose the screw heads),..." Read more

"...charcoal fits wadded up inside the glass funnel, and it removes any residual chemicals that might have been distilled along with the water; in..." Read more

"...Cleaning the water canister is simple, I just scrub it a bit each time with a plastic brush...." Read more

"...this pitcher better (even with the flaw) because it has a wide mouth for easy cleaning if needed...." Read more

216 customers mention "Ease of use"192 positive24 negative

Customers find the water purification unit easy to use. They mention it's simple, convenient, and has a suitable timer that's easy and accurate to set. Some say the method for using the distiller is dirt simple.

"...It is quite simple and easy to clean the upper section: Remove the three screws (gently pry back the rubber sealing ring to expose the screw heads),..." Read more

"...Unfortunately, finding a suitable timer that was easy and accurate to set, with repeatable resolution of not greater than 10 minutes and a timing..." Read more

"...My first one is still going great, no issues at all...." Read more

"...Unit is pretty simple and will give you about a gallon of distilled water in a glass jar after 5.5 to 6 hours and it does that without any problems..." Read more

204 customers mention "Build quality"169 positive35 negative

Customers like the build quality of the water purification unit. They mention it's well-made, stable, and durable. Customers also appreciate that the cords and connectors have held up very well.

"...time to failure" equipment, we are beyond amazement at this well made appliance...." Read more

"...I am very pleased with the quality of this product, and it works well for me.The" Read more

"...I'm glad they're so durable, that's mostly all I have to say." Read more

"...The quality of these distillers is OUTSTANDING. Others have noted the button shaped spots on the bottom and the "thinness" of the steel...." Read more

177 customers mention "Value for money"146 positive31 negative

Customers appreciate the value for money of the water purification unit. They mention that the negligible cost is well worth the fact that they no longer have to lug around 5 gallon jugs.

"...For the price, this is probably the most economical & convenient way to remove unwanted solids from tao water. (No expensive filters to buy.)..." Read more

"...It's well built, easy to clean and economical to run...." Read more

"...The cleaner and carbon filters aren't THAT expensive...." Read more

"...So all in all, it's good bang for your buck, cheaper than the others, reliable, and if you can remember to shut it off 5 1/2 hours in, perfectly..." Read more

169 customers mention "Water quality"124 positive45 negative

Customers like the water quality of the product. They mention it's good with or without the filter, and the most amazing water they have ever had in their lives. They also appreciate the convenience of never running out of distilled water. Additionally, customers say the water comes out much clearer and better tasting than tap and even some bottled water.

"...Pros: Essentially unlimited pure water Distilled water is even more pure than from the Zero filter No plastic land-fill..." Read more

"...Anyway, once you get it working it produces fine water..." Read more

"I like that it turns tap water into distilled water. After reading reviews, I bought a timer so it woul shut off before all the water evaporated...." Read more

"...Then, as you add more and more minerals the water stays cloudy, and if you let the water sit for a moment the minerals drop and collect on the bottom..." Read more

124 customers mention "Noise level"52 positive72 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the noise level of the water purification unit. Some mention it's not overly loud, while others say it's noisy and the fan squeals on start-up.

"...It isn't quiet, but it's not loud enough to hear in the living room from my kitchen. Pretty straight forward...." Read more

"...Noise is not a problem which is not much anyway. I jsut didn't care for the quality of glass collecting jug...." Read more

"...It is a bit noisy, the fan running about 70dBA (74dBC) on my meter, which is a bit louder than the the ceiling vent fan in my laundry room...." Read more

"...2. The glass collection bin is nice and very large volume, but the charcoal packet that you put in the plastic dispenser is tiny and the directions..." Read more

Finally clean water and peace of mind
5 out of 5 stars
Finally clean water and peace of mind
I can’t believe what was in our water. We have a sediment filter and as water enters our house it goes through a water softener and then it goes through a good under sink filter. But just look at what was left over after distilling one gallon of filtered water... yuck and I's not really clean at all. Most people say you should add electrolytes and good minerals to distilled water and some people say it’s not necessary because you get minerals from the food you eat. We love our water now it tastes good and we feel good about drinking it now. If you stop the distiller just before it’s empty it will be easier to clean out the sediment. The con's are it take about 5 1/2 hrs. to make 1 gal. of distilled water.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2009
[SIX YEAR UPDATE: 2/6/2016 - Our water distiller is still going strong after six plus years of use. When we wrote the original review we had no expectations of this appliance, that's been run daily distilling either one or two gallons of water, to last this long - with no repairs or replacement parts. We were pleased with the distiller back then, and now, in this era of planned obsolescence and "mean average time to failure" equipment, we are beyond amazement at this well made appliance. Perhaps we are just lucky at the longevity of our distiller, but we felt it was worth mentioning.]

Original Review:
Where we live the water is bad looking and bad tasting, and our home has old galvanized piping and copper with joints that are lead soldered. We've been buying bottled drinking water for the past couple of decades.

The cost of bottled water keeps going up in price. Pulling out the calculator, we estimated that our family's bottled drinking water consumption, at current bottled water prices, is costing around six hundred dollars a year!

The economics of the matter was quite clear; despite the initial cost and the electricity to run the appliance, a water distiller would save us money and effort over buying and hauling water from the store.

Enter the distiller.

We bought a water distiller and have been making a couple of gallons of distilled water a day since it arrived. The distiller works very well with little oversight or interaction needed, though it needs occasional descaling and rinsing, and you must be careful when working with the appliance when it is hot.

The method for using the distiller is dirt simple: Fill the tank with water to the line, place the cooling/steam recovery tower on top of the boiler tank, put the water collection bottle under the water drain, plug the appliance in, and walk away. Then, come back later to pour the freshly distilled water into your water storage container of choice.

Other reviewers have noted the problem with large amounts of scale residue left in the boiler tank after distillation, and we noticed the same thing especially with the crappy water we start with. We partially solved the problem of scale residue by buying a "pitcher style" water filter and using that as a quick "pre-filter" to remove much of the sediment, chemicals, and other impurities, and then pouring the filtered water in the distiller. We now filter the water before we add it to the distiller.

(Note that "pitcher style" water filters are only rated for removing a portion of the contaminants found in the average municipal water supply, and for us is no substitute for the purity of distilled water. Using a pitcher type water filter as a "pre-filter" for your distiller adds to the final cost per gallon of distilled water when you factor in the replacement cost of filters.)

We noticed that the "pre-filtered" distilled water tastes better, as the pitcher style water filter uses activated charcoal to filter water before it goes into the distiller. The "pre-filter" method has cut down on most of the baked on sediment and residue that coated the bottom and sides of the distiller, making boiler tank cleaning a much more infrequent necessity and saving us time and trouble.

(Even after filtering the water with a "pitcher style" water filter like those advertised on television, the quantity of residue left in the distiller tank is amazing.)

We also followed the advice of other reviewers and now use a heavy duty appliance timer to turn off the distiller after five hours of running, and that leaves about a half inch of water in the bottom of the tank so the sediment and residue remains dissolved and doesn't cook to the tank.

One caution: Wait a good half hour or more after turning the distiller off (pulling the plug) before removing the top "cooling tower". A distiller is nothing more than a boiler, and it gets very hot and contains lots of high temperature steam that can burn you quickly. Wait for the machine to cool before handling.

We have the distiller on a kitchen counter and we don't find the fan noise obnoxious or disturbing, but it does make a noticeable sound.

The best advantage of the water distiller is we no longer have to haul gallons and gallons of drinking water home every week from the store! We have arrived in the twenty-first century; finally, we have clean drinking water on tap.

=============================

Two (2) year update:

Our distiller is still going strong with constant use, distilling at least one, and often two gallons of water a day and it still works as good as new. We're very pleased to the point where we are adding this update with our latest observations about this excellent appliance.

Before we made the purchase two years ago through Amazon, we factored in all of the costs in a spreadsheet to see if buying a water distiller made economic sense, and at the time we determined it would take two years of use for the distiller to work out being cheaper than buying store-brand distilled water in gallon containers. If you break down the costs for the distiller unit based on the number of gallons you use per year divided by the cost of the unit, then add in the electrical cost (distiller wattage times number of hours to distill a gallon of water, times cost per watt hour charged by your electric company), you will arrive at a cost per gallon of distilled water.

We determined that the distiller's cost per gallon was around seventy-one cents per gallon, after two years producing two gallons per day. Two years ago, distilled water was selling for around eighty-three cents a gallon at the grocery store, so it made sense to buy the distiller if it would last at least two years, and we are please to report that the distiller has indeed lasted two years and is still going strong.

You should be aware that your distiller might require special maintenance (beyond regularly descaling the interior boiler compartment with white vinegar), as described below:

The upper section, the removable top of the unit which is the steam recovery area, has a small fan to draw outside air through a series of fins attached to a long curved water tube that captures the steam and then cools and condenses it back into water to drip into the glass collection container. The closely spaced cooling fins can collect dust when air is pulled through the upper unit by the fan. To remove the dust build up, there are three (3) screws that can be unscrewed to remove the outer plastic cover of the upper unit, giving access to the interior fan and water cooling section with the attached fins.

It is quite simple and easy to clean the upper section: Remove the three screws (gently pry back the rubber sealing ring to expose the screw heads), and take the two sections apart. Then rinse the solid plastic cover to remove any accumulated dust. Be careful with the section containing the water cooling fins and the electric fan - we used a small dusting brush with soft bristles to successfully remove all of the built up dust that had worked its way into the upper system and into the fins surrounding the cooling tube. Once all of the dust was removed we screwed the unit back together and put the distiller back to work.

Our distiller sits on a section of kitchen counter close to an outside window, and we were surprised to find that after a couple of years use there was a substantial amount of dust build up inside the upper cooling tower. Possibly our unit is pulling dust from the outside that's being captured in the cooling fins, but this is something you might want to monitor to ensure there's no dust build up in your machine. Dust build up along the cooling fins will reduce the efficiency of the water recovery tower.

We recommend this appliance to anyone looking to save their back and their wallet by processing their own pure water at home.
69 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2013
I recently wrote another Amazon product review for the Baby Brezza Temperature Controlled Water Kettle, which I use to keep water at body temperature for nasal irrigation. Shortly after I started using that product, I realized that I was growing tired of worrying about the possibility, albeit a remote one, of getting an infection of the amoeba "Naegleria fowleri" from my well water, and was also tired of always running out of gallon jugs of distilled water from the store just when I needed it. Besides occasional nasal irrigation, I also have some backup sump batteries that need topping off with distilled water in the colder and dryer months, and I also run some chemical processes in my home laboratory that require distilled water for best results. I started looking for a small distiller intended for home use, and Google searches led me to this MegaHome unit. It had mostly good reviews so I bought one from Amazon.

The product comes with the boiler/condenser unit, a glass pitcher of about 1 gallon capacity, a box of six activated charcoal packets, and a jar of citric acid pellets. The product arrives in a box that at first seems to have only the boiler/condenser inside, but on closer inspection it reveals a sort of Russian doll scheme where the glass pitcher, with handle removed, is inside the boiler tank, the handle parts, citric acid and charcoal filters are inside the pitcher. You need to assemble the handle to the pitcher, which involves wrapping two stainless steel straps around the pitcher (they fit into recessed grooves in the glass), then screwing the handle onto nuts that are welded to the straps. A plastic cover snaps onto the handle to cover the mounting hardware. You also need to assemble the condenser which is comprised of a small glass funnel and a plastic housing for the funnel, and this snaps onto the discharge end of the condenser. One packet of activated charcoal fits wadded up inside the glass funnel, and it removes any residual chemicals that might have been distilled along with the water; in practice this makes distilled drinking water taste better. The assembly snaps off to change the packet.

The boiler/condenser is in two parts. The boiler rests on the counter top, shelf, or other suitable flat surface. It consists of a stainless steel tank that holds a bit more than one gallon, with an electric heating underneath. An integrated circuit breaker/thermostat on the side of the boiler turns off the heater when all the water in the tank is boiled off, and also protects against overloads or other faults. It does not work as an on/off switch.

The condenser rests on top of the boiler, and stays in place because a lip along the edge keeps it centered on the boiler. A gasket seals the two together, although it is only gravity at work and no hardware is used to latch it in place. The condenser consists of a stainless steel dome that collects the steam created from the boiling water below, and the steam exits the dome through a hole that leads to a double coil of stainless steel tubing that wraps around inside the condenser. An electric motor with a fan is mounted in the middle of the coils of tubing, and draws in cool air through side vents, past the coils (cooling the steam inside and condensing it back to water), and exhausts through vents in the top. An electrical cord runs down from the condenser and plugs into a socket near the base of the boiler, right next to where the power cord comes in. This makes it easy to unplug and detach the condenser from the boiler for cleaning.

The citric acid is used to clean the stainless steel when it gets funky from minerals and other impurities bake onto the surfaces after some use. You just make a batch with some citric acid in it, then drain and wipe clean.

In practice, you lift the condenser from the boiler and lay it down next to the boiler. Then fill the boiler tank to the 'FULL' line, replace the condenser on top, and plug it into the electrical outlet. The electric heater starts and the fan also starts. It takes at least half an hour for the water in the tank to reach a good boil, but the insulated boiler keeps the outside from getting more than just a bit warm to the touch. Once the water is boiling, you will notice that the air exiting the top of the condenser is now pretty warm, since it is removing heat from the steam. Distilled water begins to drip out of the discharge nozzle on the side (it passes through the activated charcoal inside the glass funnel on its way out), and into the glass pitcher. The discharge nozzle fits right into the pouring spout of the pitcher, so that the plastic pitcher cover can remain in place during distillation. This keeps dust, bugs, cats, etc; out of your pure distilled water. When all the water is boiled off, the temperature inside the boiler rises sharply and this causes the thermostat to pop and turn the electric heater and fan off. Now you have a full gallon of distilled water in the pitcher ready for use. I pour it directly into an empty plastic jug that 'store-bought' distilled water came in. You can then leave the distiller alone, or you can immediately refill the tank, reset the thermostat, and make another batch right away.

The distiller works at a rate of about one gallon per every six hours, so you can distill up to four gallons in a 24 hour period.

I use my distiller on well water that has a number of impurities, including iron, magnesium, calcium, 'sludge', and other trace elements. After a few batches of water, the inside of the boiler tank has a film of this stuff baked on. As confirmed by the users manual, this is OK to leave there, as it does not affect the quality of the distilled water coming out. But eventually, I want to clean it and this is where the citric acid comes in. I put in a gallon of water and some acid, bring it to a boil, then drain and rinse, then wipe the inside surfaces, rinse once again and I'm ready for more distilling.

One 'trick' to reduce how fast the mineral film builds up inside the boiler is to never allow all the water to be boiled off. I try to arrange it so that I stop the process when about 1" of water remains in the boiler tank. I use a digital electrical timer to turn the power on for 5 hours and 30 minutes, and this setting seems to reliably do the trick. Unfortunately, finding a suitable timer that was easy and accurate to set, with repeatable resolution of not greater than 10 minutes and a timing length of at least 6 hours was difficult. Most timers out there, at least those readily available to consumers, have either short duration of less than an hour, or else they are difficult to set accurately and you will either have them running for too long or not long enough. Some timers such as this one:

http://www.amazon.com/15079-7-Day-Plug-In-Digital-Timer/dp/B002HEO7N8/ref=sr_1_16?ie=UTF8&qid=1359170269&sr=8-16&keywords=digital+electric+timer+countdown

might work, but you would need to make sure that the one you choose can be operated WITHOUT being cyclic, in other words it will not turn the distiller back on a while after turning it off at the end of a distilling batch. I chose a rather pricy one by Borg General (digital interval count down timer series 650, originally made by Diehl) that costs about $100 and is available online. This works brilliantly but needs to be mounted in something since it does not have an enclosure of its own. By the time you put it in a box, add a power switch and power cord and outlet for plugging in the distiller, you will have spent $150 on it.

I am very pleased with the quality of this product, and it works well for me.

The
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Top reviews from other countries

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Labranche André
5.0 out of 5 stars comment structurer l'eau distillé pour la rendre de qualité potable
Reviewed in Canada on March 1, 2021
Pour deux raisons, l'eau distillé et la rendre potable