Farberware Countertop Microwave 1.1 Cu. Ft. 1000-Watt Compact Microwave Oven with LED lighting, Child lock, and Easy Clean Interior, Stainless…
$120
- Spacious & stylish: with 1.1-Cu. feet Of cooking capacity, a sleek Stainless Steel exterior and Stainless Steel interior and 10 power levels, This counter top microwave delivers power, style, and convenience to any kitchen
- 6 cooking programs: Auto cooking programs (popcorn, potato, pizza, frozen vegetable, dinner plate) provide convenient control and avoid guesswork
- Express cooking: Cook your leftovers with just a touch of a button by touching the number pad (1 through 6 minutes)
- Digital clock: Easy-to-read LED display lights up the digital clock and highlights each cooking setting
- Child lock: Lock the control panel using the child safety lock option to prevent accidental use or access by children
- Defrost: For all your frozen foods, defrost by time or Weight so you can enjoy more flavorful foods
- Glass turntable: large 12.5-Inch glass turntable allows for even cooking and is removable for easy clean up
Specification: Farberware Countertop Microwave 1.1 Cu. Ft. 1000-Watt Compact Microwave Oven with LED lighting, Child lock, and Easy Clean Interior, Stainless…
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10 reviews for Farberware Countertop Microwave 1.1 Cu. Ft. 1000-Watt Compact Microwave Oven with LED lighting, Child lock, and Easy Clean Interior, Stainless…
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F. Perodin –
Le micro-ondes est très bien mais le support de la table tournante est de très mauvaise qualité et fait un bruit intolérable après quelques mois d’utilisation. Dommage car ça déprécie le produit.
Gail H. –
So far really like this microwave. The only reason for not giving 5 stars is when things are done it beeps 5 times and then goes back to the clock. If you are outside or didn’t hear the beeper being elderly you might forget that you put something in the microwave. My old one would say ended until you took the food out.
Grace Nottingham –
It works good looks good and I am happy with the product.
Alfrieda Stevens –
Good microwave from a company with a long standing good business history I gave it as a gift. My mother in law was very pleased. Or sho would have stated so ! LOL
MarKatie –
We needed a new microwave and we didn’t want to spend a fortune.
We have a build in cabinet and it was difficult to fine a microwave that fit the dimensions. The measurement provided are exact.
It’s easy to use and I like that the interior is grey, not white.
CC –
First of all, this Farberware microwave oven is Farberware only in name/branding, which Farberware licenses for the purpose to Englewood Marketing, which gets the ovens made mostly in China, and then markets, sells, and warrantees them. It’s not really up to Farberware traditional standards, but still probably among the best in a large, really crummy field of available microwaves.
This oven comes in 4 or 5 different “colors;” mine is “stainless steel,” and calling that the “color” is pretty accurate, as there’s a thin veneer of what probably is really stainless on/around the front face of the oven, and that’s it, that’s about all the stainless on or in this oven, ‘most everything else is plastic and cheap, painted steel. The very first bullet point of the product description falsely says, “Stainless Steel exterior and Stainless Steel interior,” but that’s just a big, bad lie. (It’s generally easy to tell, as a magnet isn’t attracted to stainless – and stainless is almost never painted or coated, ‘cause it’s fine without.) Nonetheless, from the front, it actually looks good, handsome. From the top and sides it looks like what it is, plastic and cheap painted steel. But still it’s probably about as good or better as any other at the price.
(There is another available color, “copper,” which is also handsome, but, ironically, reminds me very much of Revere Ware cooking pots, Farberware’s long-time traditional rival.)
This oven consumes 1500 watts electrical power, by actual measure, same as advertised. I haven’t yet bothered to measure/test the microwave radiative power delivered into the cooking chamber, to see if it matches the advertised 1000 watts. (The difference, the missing 500 watts, is lost in the process of converting from electrical power to microwave.)
This oven, so far for us, cooks well and evenly enough. There are a lot of reviewers here reporting various hard, early failures with this oven, but so far at least we’ve been lucky, ours works. Time will tell.
Reduced power levels, e.g. 50%, as/when requested by the user, are achieved, not by actually running at 50% power, but by cycling between full on and off at somewhere around 10 second intervals with a 50% (or whatever) duty cycle. (Do all microwave ovens work this way, is it too hard to really “dim” the microwave generator?) I suppose this is mostly okay, but if you want say 50% power for a short period like 10 seconds, perhaps to soften a small amount of butter, you’re quite out of luck.
The power cord is 3 feet long – rather short, too short for our situation, we’re forced to get and use an extension cord. Our previous microwave cord was 4-1/2 feet, which worked perfectly by itself.
The oven’s operational noise is a bit loud, certainly a bit louder than our previous microwave.
The oven’s audio beep signaling sound is produced on way too many occasions; and way too many beeps for less than no possible purpose – like it’s beeping to notify you at the end of a cooking cycle – which is pretty ridiculous in the first place, as the oven is noisy enough in operation that you’d have to be deaf not to hear it stop – and you’ve opened the door and it obviously knows that too but still continues to beep regardless; and it (the beeping, still) is too loud; and is especially sorely lacking a way to just turn the whole darn beeper off (i.e. *OFF*). A super nasty, irritating fault in my view, believing firmly that machines should be seen but not heard. Especially egregious since the makers of this oven invested so much in hardware and firmware for cheesy gimmicks like dedicated Pizza and dog-food buttons, but couldn’t be bothered to simply add a small bit of firmware to allow the owner/user of the oven to tell it to just be quiet, do not beep at me!
Occasionally this oven requires two or more presses of a button before it registers. This is probably just some flakiness in the (always cheap) membrane button switches, but might also be a bug in the firmware, I haven’t lived with this oven for long enough to know which yet.
The oven interior light is needlessly ridiculously dim; and the oven interior surface is needlessly dark, medium-dark grey (could as easily and better been lighter-colored); and visibility through its front-door window is very poor (heavily obscured by some kind of presumably protective masking, but also needlessly dark); so overall visibility of whatever’s inside is triply-needlessly extremely poor. My mate sarcastically called it “theatrical.” I call it nearly useless, almost impossible to see into. They could just as easily install a light bulb with 10 times the light output.
The Instruction Manual is written in rather broken english, presumably by a Chinese, sometimes understandable, but often not. Fortunately the oven is not so complicated that you can’t generally bumble around and figure it out.
Customer service – by Englewood Marketing, in Green Bay, WI USA – is remarkably quick, nice, knowledgeable and helpful, at least for answering operational questions. Didn’t try ‘em on any more substantial matters.
The real, actual weight of this oven, including the turntable, excluding all the packaging, is 29lbs, 14ozs., i.e. 2oz’s. under 30lbs. The Instruction Manual says the “Net Weight” is “Approx 31.0Lbs” – but I’m pretty certain that’s just not currently accurate, over by a pound. Given that they specified the ostensible weight down to the tenth of a pound, I’d guess that their scale is accurate but that they have lightened/cheapened the oven by “approx.” a pound since they earlier put it into production and weighed it. And this oven’s weight is perhaps a little bit light in the field of similarly priced ovens. This might be somewhat the cause of the weight of this particular oven being so rarely noted – and so all over the map, anywhere from 24 to 36lbs., when it is mentioned.
The warranty on this oven is nominally for 1 year – but, like pretty much all current microwave warranties, effectively worthless by the time you get done navigating its terms and conditions. In almost any case of a problem, you’d be better off just biting the bullet and getting another oven.
So why, out of the hundreds of microwave ovens available, did we get this one? Because it appears to me that they are all pretty crummy, badly flawed, a number of them even severe fire hazards; of those that will fit our strictly constrained space, this Farberware seemed and still seems to be the most-capable/least-awful, at pretty much any price.
If I were rating on an absolute scale, considering this Farberware oven’s many faults, I would give it only 3 stars. But, considering the large field of its mediocre competitors, grading somewhat on a curve, I’ll give it 4 stars for now.
Constance M Beatty –
The auto “beverage” heats beverage for 50 seconds. Not very hot! My last microwave was set for 110 seconds which heated 12 oz cup to steaming hot. On a positive note, I am pleased (so far) and use it daily.
Jody Nelson –
I purchased this MW oven when I remodeled my kitchen. I did not want a built in one that was in my face every time I went to the stove. So I ordered this one that will sit on my new counters next to the stove. Not only is it a nice looking oven, but it cooks well, too.
ARTIE P’s SEMI-PRO SHOP –
Setting the clock was a surprising challenge… Pressing and HOLDING the number buttons was the trick. The instant 30 seconds on pressing the start button (and increasing 30 seconds more upon each press) was a nice feature. The unit was a bit LOUD upon actual operation, and the BEEP upon completion continues THREE times, even if you open the door right away, which wasn’t a plus. Overall it is a fine microwave, and I would buy it again.
R. Runyon –
Box was damaged on arrival and the microwave itself is dented pretty significantly on the top edge about halfway back behind the control panel. I was initially disappointed when I saw the damage, but decided to plug it in and see if it heated.
I put in a coffee mug with some water and set it for 3 minutes. The water was hot and steamy when I took it out!
I keep a couple of those plastic covers that prevent splattering on the top of the microwave so I never see the damage anyway.
Some people have said there isn’t a light when you open the door. I can verify that there definitely IS a light. It’s not the brightest and it has to shine through a grating in the right-hand side just behind the control panel.
All in all, it does what I need and if it hadn’t been damaged I would have rated it 5 stars.