Philips 3000 Serie L HD9100/20 vs Philips 5000 Series Dual Basket Airfryer NA552
Comparaison cote a cote pour vous aider a choisir
6800 avis
$
Comparaison des specifications
| Specification | Philips 3000 Serie L HD9100/20 | Philips 5000 Series Dual Basket Airfryer NA552 |
|---|---|---|
| Prix | $undefined | $undefined |
| Note | 4.2/5 | 4.7/5 |
| Capacite | 3.7L | 9 L |
| Puissance | 1400W | 2750W |
| Poids | 3.9 kg | 8.75 kg |
| Dimensions | 26x30x26 cm | 35.1x44.3x38.2 cm |
Philips 3000 Serie L HD9100/20
We see the HD9100 as the purest entry-level air fryer in the Philips range. You get the Rapid Air technology that makes Philips air fryers popular, in the smallest and cheapest package possible. In our tests fries came out evenly crispy in about 15 minutes, and the analog controls are genuinely easy to use. At 70 EUR it competes with the Silvercrest from Lidl but delivers noticeably better airflow and crispiness. If you want simplicity and trusted Philips quality for a small household, the HD9100 delivers. If you want a screen and presets, step up to the HD9252 for about 10 EUR more.
Philips 5000 Series Dual Basket Airfryer NA552
We put the NA552 through two weeks of family dinners and the steam function genuinely surprised us. Steaming broccoli in the small basket while air frying chicken thighs in the large one produced noticeably more tender vegetables than our stovetop steamer, and the chicken skin came out crispy at 200 degrees in about 22 minutes. The 2750W element heats up fast and we measured consistent temperatures across both baskets. The sync finish feature worked reliably in our tests, with both sides completing within about 20 seconds of each other. Where it falls short is connectivity. At 2999 kr we expected app support, but Philips reserves that for the 7000 line. If steam matters to you and you cook for 4 or more people, this is the best dual-basket option in the Philips range right now.
