Chill out with Euhomy! ❄️ Your ice-making solution awaits!
The EUHOMY Commercial Ice Maker Machine is a robust, stainless steel under-counter ice maker that produces 100 lbs of ice per day and has a 33 lbs storage capacity. Designed for both commercial and home use, it features an ETL certification, a smart LCD control panel, and operates quietly while being energy efficient. Regular maintenance is simplified with an automatic cleaning function.
B**H
Great Icemaker! Love it!
This ice maker is terrific! Love it!Makes lots of ice! Easy to set up! Was making ice within minutes.I keep this ice maker in my shop, and it gets hot in there...but the ice maker keeps on making ice, keeping levels full in the ice bin! I would buy again!
C**N
Great value for small businesses
Wow! We have a venue and this tiny ice maker is incredible! We can bag two 10-lb bags of ice to freeze in a few hours for our wedding guests - highly recommend a water pump to connect to your drain if it's above ground level as it's not designed to keep the ice frozen (which is preferable for us). This is one of our most treasured purchases, it's compact, easy to set and really gets things done, for the price and the quantity of ice it delivers, it is an amazing unit.
J**3
This thing is an ice making beast!
Bought the 100lbs/24hr machine, could not be more impressed. Understand, this is a commercial ice maker. Like all devices of this type, it is NOT a freezer (meaning it will not keep the ice frozen), but it is well insulated, and makes excellent ice fast. It is meant for applications where you’re going through a lot of ice, which is being constantly replenished. If you just want a machine in your kitchen to make a little extra ice over/above what your in-freezer ice maker generates, this is probably not the right product for you. We have this at our lake house where we’re constantly filling coolers, blenders, and tumblers with ice. I replaced a machine that was literally 7-10x the cost. This machine out performs it bigtime. Some reviewers note the ice doesn’t always break apart. That is true, but also indicative of just how dense and cold the ice is. I spent $8 on a stainless steel scoop - problem solved. I had questions before I bought it and easily reached customer service by both email and phone, which is also very impressive. Bottom line, this machine is outstanding, especially for the price, and the company / seller also appears to be very good.
S**D
Not bad…so far
Pretty easy install, really, even with an in-line filter. Makes tons of ice pretty quick but, the adjustment for (thinner/thicker) ice (or whatever it’s called)?? Not happening. Has a little “dimple” on the end of the cube no matter the setting. No biggie. The worst part? This thing is LOUD!! Scares the cats every time they walk by. They’ll get used to it. Just be ready for a “loud, new noise” in the house. It’s been installed for 4 days. No issues yet. I did elevate the unit to install a condensate pump to remove the melting to the washer drain. I don’t have a floor drain. Seems to be working well so far.Update - So, here we are. 4 months later. I have to say, this machine puts the ice out. No. It’s not a freezer and the ice melts. Put the hose in a floor drain or get a pump and drain it elsewhere. Now, the infamous “E2” code. Yes. I get the code every now and then. My experience is, ice doesn’t “eject” because of the amount of ice in the bin and “hangs up” the flipper thing. Or, the flipper thing needs a manual tap a time or 2. Either way, I clear the ice that didn’t fall properly or tap the flipper, turn the unit off and wait 5-10 seconds and turn it back on. Works just fine and I don’t have to call Customer Service. IMO?? It’s a keeper.
S**S
Working great, makes ice at the rated speed!
This product is certainly "easy to install". I put that in quotes, since you need a water line coming in, and a drain line going out. It's very easy, in that it just plugs into your power outlet (no hard wiring), but if you aren't particularly handy you might need a plumber to run those lines for you. But it's not a complicated install either way.Some things to note, and none of these are 'knocks' on the Euhomy, this is the way all ice makers in this category operate, but if you're just getting one for the first time for your house, maybe you didn't know.1) The bin where the ice is stored is just a bin. Ice in there will slowly melt over time. Only the part of the machine where the ice is made is chilled. This is probably a good thing for you. It makes this product much more affordable, and it is friendlier to your electric bill.2) You need three things - a power outlet (regular 110V), a water line coming in (same as your refrigerator's ice maker needed), and a drain line coming out - remember that bin? When ice melts, it becomes water. That will pool on the floor, or you can run the line and remove the water. Do that. ;)In my case, we installed it in our garage. It's not obnoxiously loud, but if you put it in your kitchen, you WILL hear the condenser come on as it's making ice. It sits about 6 feet from our hot water heater, so we had a relatively easy install, we had a guy tap that water line for the heater, and run it also to the Euhomy. Voila, ice coming in! We installed a water filter in between the water line and the ice maker, because filtration!For the drain line, there was no way to get it safely outside my garage floor without a condensate pump. All ice makers like this rely on a gravity drain. If the drain line runs DOWN, gravity will ensure the water leaves. The further you run that line, the less likely you can keep it sloping downward. So any local big box hardware store will sell for under $100 a water condensate pump. Run the line to the pump, and then from the pump to a place where it's safe for water to go, and you're good to go. Our line from the ice maker to the pump is a downward slope, and the pump has a float, then when it floats that means enough water is in the unit, and it pumps it out of our house. Get a good pump, the cheap ones fail relentlessly. Our same plumber ran that line right next to where the water heater's exit line was, drilled a small hole, and boom - all my melted ice water flows safely to the grass outside my garage.One last thing... I'll say it again. If you need a condensate pump, buy a good one. The first one we had died really quick. The cheap ones are very cheap, and being in the garage didn't help (the motor overheated). We knew it failed right away, there was puddle of water on the floor one morning, and the unit was very hot. It had a small fan near the power supply that burned out within a month of installation. I bought a much better pump, and have had no problems yet. It also has a float-less design (one less thing to get 'stuck') and lots of indicators. Don't spend $400-500 on a ice maker, and possibly $200-400 on a plumber and then stick a cheap pump in there. Get a good pump if you need it!Because it's in a garage, and because that garage is in South Florida, I did use the timer feature to let it "freeze" ice longer. I have it set to +4 - which basically means it freezes the ice an additional four minutes before dropping it in the bin. The ice was a little to "soft" with some unfrozen water in the middle of the cube otherwise. Depending on where your ice maker is, you might not need that drastic an adjustment. It still makes ice really quick and really often.The ONLY other quirk is... it's rainy season in Florida. We get a lot of thunderstorms, and our power likes to blip out for a minute or two sometimes. This unit will NOT turn itself back on. So some morning I walk in, and the bin is less than full because the power in the house went out briefly. Push the power button, reset my timer to +4 and I'm good to go. I wish it had an auto-power feature to turn itself back on. I may add a small UPS to avoid the power interruptions, and to prolong the life on the unit.
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3 days ago
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