Help me find this swank coffee maker in the USA

This one. Maybe someone with better Google-fu can find an online source that would let me purchase it in the USA?

You’d be highly unlikely to find this for sale in the US as the thing runs on 240 volt power, and normal US outlets provide 120.

That’s not saying WMF can’t re-work it to run on 120, but don’t hold your breath is all I can advise.

If you were able to get your hands on one, you’d need to hire an electrician to run a 240-volt circuit to wherever you want to use this, and to change the plug on the coffeemaker to a 240-volt style, which would be a big honkin’ thing about as big as a coffee cup.

Really? I couldn’t just get a voltage converter?

I have a hijack. I hope that’s okay. The description of this coffee maker says that it holds enough water to make one cup of coffee which means that you’ll only use fresh water to make coffee. How is that different that every other coffee maker? With my current coffee maker and every other one I’ve ever owned or operated, if I put in six cups of water, the coffee maker make six cups of coffee. If I put in one cup of water, the coffee maker will make one cup of coffee. It doesn’t matter how much water I put it, the coffee maker will make an equivalent amount of coffee, discounting the small amount of moisture that stays in the coffee grinds. As a result, every time I set my coffee maker up to make coffee, I’m putting in fresh water. Are there coffee makers that don’t do this? Why is it advertised as a special feature on this coffee maker?

On a non-hijack note, that’s a really cute coffee maker. Good luck finding one in the US.

You’re right, that’s a weird selling point. This is a single-serving coffee pad deal … maybe they’re contrasting it with bigger (office-size) single-serve coffee makers? The kind where everyone in the office uses it all day, but they each get a single fresh-brewed-on-demand cup from it? (Instead of brewing a pot.) If those have a reservoir, I can see where the water might sit for a day or more and get stale.

Not for the kind of amperage a coffeemaker will consume.

The specs on that site indicate it draws 1400 watts - this equates to 12 amps on a 120-volt cicuit.

It is possible to make the conversion, but not with one of those pocket-sized “travel adapters” - for an appliance, you’d need something beefier like this unit that sells for close to $80, plus about $35 for shipping. (Transformers are heavy things!)

So, it’s not impossible - it’ll just be expensive.