• out of stock

Breville BKC250 Kettle Cleaner - $3.75 (Was $5) + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $39 Spend) @ Amazon AU

500
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

Breville BKC250 Kettle Cleaner

  • $3.75 delivered on Amazon Prime AU

  • Never been cheaper on Amazon AU according to camel camel camel.

Description
The Breville Kettle Cleaner will remove scale build up and stains in order to help revitalise your kettle

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.
This is part of Black Friday / Cyber Monday deals for 2020

Related Stores

Amazon AU
Amazon AU
Marketplace

closed Comments

  • +1

    this works really well.

    highly recommend it.

    • +8

      And so does white vinegar, which at $1/L is 1/5th as much and can be watered down too.

      No matter which you use, just heat a little and leave it, the longer you leave it, the harder it works for you and the longer you can make the bottle last.

  • +13

    Waiting for the, 'Just go boil a lemon/kumquat' comments.

    • LOL

    • Just had to wait another 2 minutes

    • Haha, lucky I searched "lemon" before posting. :D

  • +12

    Vinegar instead of this cleaner.

    • +1

      my sister has the Glass Breville kettle and she only uses white vinegar (think that's the one) and it looks as good as new

    • +1

      Boiling vinegar and bicarbonate soda is the best solution. Just boil it for once.

      • +2

        Citrus acid also works a treat!

      • Straight or watered down by x:1?

        • +1

          some people on YT say 2:1 or 1:1 water to vinegar ratio.

          some add lemon.

          some add bicarb soda.

      • Vinegar and bicarbonate soda will neutralise each other. Acid mixed with alkali. Wouldn't this make it ineffective?

      • Bicarbonate soda would only cancel out the acetic acid in vinegar.

        • +1

          That bicarbonate stuff is pretty basic

    • +1

      why when i boil vinegar it like bubbles too violently and floods out the kettle :(

      • +2

        You're not meant to fill it…

  • +1 for vinegar..

  • +7

    came for the boiling lemon comments, stayed for the boiling vinegar ones instead!

  • I've used this a couple times, nearly finished my current bottle. But I've come to realise, that really what you just need to do is make sure you reguarly clean the inside of the kettle with say a paper towel, maybe dipped in some vinegar on a monthly basis. And you'll see the towel ends up being yellow if you haven't done it for some time. It's like those plastic water jugs I use at home. If I keep filling up it without washing the inside, after a few weeks, the jug becomes yellow eventually but will come off very easily once I wash it with the sponge.

    • I doubt it's the same. Kettle water is boiled, so what remains are minerals and other inorganic particles. I'd suggest that yellow in the jugs is a different beast to the stains in the kettle, and far more unpleasant…

      • those inorganic particles often appear brown or yellow

  • I think we can use it as a descaler for Delonghi dedica coffee machine.

Login or Join to leave a comment