Philips Airfryer XXL HD9285/90 vs Philips 2000 Series Airfryer NA231 6.2L
Comparacion lado a lado para ayudarte a decidir
Comparacion de especificaciones
| Especificacion | Philips Airfryer XXL HD9285/90 | Philips 2000 Series Airfryer NA231 6.2L |
|---|---|---|
| Precio | $undefined | $undefined |
| Valoracion | 4.6/5 | 4.5/5 |
| Capacidad | 6.2L | 6.2 L |
| Potencia | 2000W | 1700W |
| Peso | 7.7 kg | 4.3 kg |
| Dimensiones | 32.2x30.3x43.4 cm | 30.9x30.8x40.3 cm |
Philips Airfryer XXL HD9285/90
We tested the HD9285/90 over 4 weeks and it is easy to see why Stiftung Warentest rated it so highly. The Rapid Air system delivers consistently even browning on fries, chicken wings, and vegetables without needing to shake the basket halfway through. The 6.2L capacity handled family-sized portions of 4 people without batching. At 170 EUR it is not the cheapest option, but the build quality and cooking results justify the premium. The fat removal technology is genuinely useful, collecting measurable grease in the bottom of the drawer after cooking chicken thighs.
Philips 2000 Series Airfryer NA231 6.2L
We tested the NA231 as a direct comparison to the 3000 Series NA332 and found it covers about 80% of the same ground at a lower price. Fries came out with good crispiness at 200 degrees in about 15 minutes, though we noticed slightly less even browning on the edges compared to the RapidAir Plus models. The 6.2 L basket comfortably handled dinner for 3 people. What you give up for the 200 kr savings is the window, 3 fewer presets, and the dehydrate and fermentation modes. For a household that mainly wants to air fry basics like fries, chicken, and vegetables without specialty cooking, the NA231 at 1199 kr is a solid entry point into the Philips ecosystem. At 4.3 kg it is genuinely portable, which matters if your kitchen is tight on space and you store the fryer between uses.
