Rosewill Induction Cooker 1800 Watt, Induction Cooktop, Electric Burner with Stainless Steel Pot 10\" 3.5 QT 18-8, RHAI-13001








Key features
- •8 Temperature Settings from 150 to 450 Degree : 150 Degree, 200 Degree, 260 Degree, 300 Degree, 350 Degree, 400 Degree, 425 Degree, 450 Degree
- •Polished Crystal Plate Surface
- •LED Large Screen Display, 4 Digitals
- •Three-Hour Timer Setting
- •Touching Control Panel
Rosewill Induction Cooker 1800 Watt, Induction Cooktop, Electric Burner with Stainless Steel Pot 10\" 3.5 QT 18-8, RHAI-13001
List Price: $96.60$86.94DEALYou Save: $9.66 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (4)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.1
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
70%
4★
10%
3★
20%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Good purchase.
Amazon Customer✓ Verified Purchase•January 3, 2018
We bought this to use during our kitchen renovation. Good buy.
Four Stars
NAME_NOT_RETURNED✓ Verified Purchase•January 2, 2018
thank you
Worth every penny
zane✓ Verified Purchase•January 1, 2018
One of the lowest priced induction cooker that lasts for years with great performance. I'll recommend anyone to buy this excellent product.
Excellent purchase for our new kitchen
Hoodoo✓ Verified Purchase•December 30, 2017
Excellent purchase for our new kitchen. We decided to ditch a surface stove and use induction cookers when we remodeled with granite countertops. These cookers will heat up to the temperature you set within a few seconds. It takes some practice to get used to the new style of cooking but it is well worth the investment. You can literally put your cooking surfaces anywhere you have a plug.
Possibly dangerous pan Included in an otherwise great product.
Michael Goosman✓ Verified Purchase•December 29, 2017
The Induction cooker worked very well. Normally I would give this product 4-5 stars on that alone..... However:
The pan that came with this, and hence part of the product for review purposes, fails miserably. On the very first use of the pan, it burned a scorch mark with a loud popping sound. Under the circumstances, I would consider this thing relatively dangerous. With a setting of 150 degree's (the lowest setting) I attempted to melt t tsps of butter. Within less than 10 seconds of starting this process a burn mark appeared and multiple loud pops could be heard from the pan. It is extremely thin, and buckled and scorched under the heat of the lowest setting? Room temperature at the time would be 74 degrees (the pan temperature somewhere close to that).
Rosewill would do well to remove the pan or provide a better pan in it's stead in future. The Induction cooker worked extremely well with another product I purchased on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00VGXM1DY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
worked so much so, that I would wholeheartedly recommend this "smallish" pan to everyone.
Not the included Rosewill pan. I actually consider it dangerous. If I had anything in the pan other than a pat of butter, I expect it would have been ejected from the pan as it burned and expanded! All of this damage..... and the butter did not even have time to melt. 8 seconds? Ridiculous.
UPDATE: Contacted Rosewill support website (email sent/ failed after filling out their form). Finally received an email about "hardware drivers" after attempting support requests for a few days. Apparently one of my emails that "failed" did make it to the support team. The problem I had was that downloading software drivers for my cooking pot would probably not work (at least not without the proper firmware and tftp login credentials). :( --maybe some of you will get that jab at Rosewill..... ????
After a few days without meaningful dialog and support from the manufacturer... I sent it back for replacement ( I know...should have done a refund) with Amazon. Of course... that was flawless. Thank you Amazon. At least someone cares about the customer.
The pan that came with this, and hence part of the product for review purposes, fails miserably. On the very first use of the pan, it burned a scorch mark with a loud popping sound. Under the circumstances, I would consider this thing relatively dangerous. With a setting of 150 degree's (the lowest setting) I attempted to melt t tsps of butter. Within less than 10 seconds of starting this process a burn mark appeared and multiple loud pops could be heard from the pan. It is extremely thin, and buckled and scorched under the heat of the lowest setting? Room temperature at the time would be 74 degrees (the pan temperature somewhere close to that).
Rosewill would do well to remove the pan or provide a better pan in it's stead in future. The Induction cooker worked extremely well with another product I purchased on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00VGXM1DY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
worked so much so, that I would wholeheartedly recommend this "smallish" pan to everyone.
Not the included Rosewill pan. I actually consider it dangerous. If I had anything in the pan other than a pat of butter, I expect it would have been ejected from the pan as it burned and expanded! All of this damage..... and the butter did not even have time to melt. 8 seconds? Ridiculous.
UPDATE: Contacted Rosewill support website (email sent/ failed after filling out their form). Finally received an email about "hardware drivers" after attempting support requests for a few days. Apparently one of my emails that "failed" did make it to the support team. The problem I had was that downloading software drivers for my cooking pot would probably not work (at least not without the proper firmware and tftp login credentials). :( --maybe some of you will get that jab at Rosewill..... ????
After a few days without meaningful dialog and support from the manufacturer... I sent it back for replacement ( I know...should have done a refund) with Amazon. Of course... that was flawless. Thank you Amazon. At least someone cares about the customer.
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