Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Danny
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2017
Should have used waterproof glue for the mesh, junk, mesh comes off and everything flows through the opening, thats why they call it full flow,
Dave Dufour
Reviewed in Canada on April 7, 2017
great
cldsk
Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2016
These are the same disposable filters I got from the hospital for kidney stones. They are good to have on hand for future (hope not) stones.They come in a nice bulk pack for a cheap price. They could also be used to filter other things though I wouldn't really use them for anything cooking related.
KB
Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2015
good product. tahnks
Brian Wicks
Reviewed in Canada on October 4, 2015
Good strainers
LittleMac
Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2014
I believe that both the description and the seller's name of this item have changed since I recently purchased. When ordered, the description was "190 micron" mesh; the description now reads "100-190 micron" mesh. In fact, the strainers I received are marked "228 micron" and have no brand marking (e.g. PPG as shown on Amazon). Viewing the mesh under a magnifying glass, I can see very little difference between the mesh of this item and the mesh of "medium" strainers that I bought locally from a national home supplies store. Otherwise, the construction of both strainer brands is virtually identical even to the same paper thickness, 0.008" (although the paper of the "home store" strainers feels stiffer) . I expect to use the strainers with latex/acrylic paints and to paint with both brushes and airless sprayers--but I have not yet tested these strainers.Since the new description is not specific, buyers should be aware that 100 micron strainers may be too fine for general use, while 190 micron strainers will likely be acceptable for general use with latex paint. 100 micron strainers may work well with varnish, shellac, and other low viscosity coatings.
ThatMNGuy
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2014
Worked like a charm for when I used 3 gallons of plastidip to paint my car and had zero complaints about the strainers. My paint job was flawless and the paint quickly flowed through the funnel/strainers.. This is way better than the old way I used to do it. Before I got these strainers I had been using my wife's good pasta strainer. Now my paint is strained well, and I also don't have that annoying enamel smell and flavor in our pasta.
NWWI.
Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2013
1/3 the price I've been paying my finish supplier.Sturdy, stands up nicely in 1 qt. cup.Filters good but much faster then other strainers I've used. Less standing around waiting . Using for filtering Cat Lacquer.Will be buying these exclusively from now on.
Xipper
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2013
I bought these to filter paint for a sprayer, however honestly I wish I just stuck with buying the ones from my local paint store as they are much higher quality and worth the price difference. I have only actually used ~6 of these so far, however I have had to throw at least 4 others in the trash due to failing.The mesh filter is not glued on well, if you are not careful when you first start pouring the paint it will just lift the edge of the mesh away from the cone and bypass the mesh screen entirely defeating the purpose. If you do succeed in getting the flow to go correctly but ever "fill" the funnel full then it overloads the mesh and just pushes it through the cutouts in the paper funnel, bypassing the screening entirely.I would not recommend these for latex paint, perhaps for thinner material they would be ok but they are not acceptable for latex in my experience.
JP
Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2013
I think they are good filters, but I didn't catch that they were auto paint filters and the 190 Micron is too fine for what I needed it for - straining cooking oil from my turkey fryer.
Recommended Products