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Born Free 9-Ounce Wide Neck BornFree Bottles Twin Pack | 
enlarge | Brand: Born Free Category: Baby Product
Buy New: $19.99
New (8) from $19.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 94 reviews Sales Rank: 27
Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.2 x 2.7
MPN: 10004 Model: 10004 UPC: 853049001039 EAN: 0853049001039 ASIN: B000MRK5MO
Release Date: November 1, 2006 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Features:
| • | Twin pack of 9 oz. wide-neck bottles made from Bisphenol-A free plastic | | • | Revolutionary venting system helps reduce colic symptoms and middle ear infections | | • | Soft stage-one nipple prevents hard suckling | | • | Includes 2 bottles, 2 stage-one nipples, and travel cover. |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description BornFree? Bisphenol-A Free plastic bottles, complete with the new innovative air vent that helps eliminate colic symptoms. Each bottle comes with a stage 1 nipple and a cover. Two 9 oz. bottles per pack.
Amazon.com Product Description A smart way to feed your precious one, this twin pack of BornFree 9-ounce wide-neck bottles is free of the potentially harmful chemical Bisphenol-A. Now you can feed your baby safely, comfortably, and worry free. BornFree is made of Polyamide, a special plastic that is Bisphenol-A free and more resistant to detergents. This bottle also features a revolutionary venting system, which helps reduce colic symptoms and the risk of middle ear infections. The unique inner valve prevents side leaks and allows you shake freely when mixing. Additionally, each bottle comes with a soft, gentle stage-one nipple that prevents hard suckling and does not collapse. This two-pack is dishwasher safe (top rack) and comes with a high-grade stage-one nipple and travel cover. What's in the Box 2 bottles, 2 stage-one nipples, and travel cover.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 89 more reviews...
Leaks terribly and includes annoying extra parts July 23, 2008 These bottles, which are obviously selling well because of the Bisphenol-A issues, leak like crazy. All you have to do is tip the bottle sideways and the milk comes gushing out like crazy. Makes a huge and annoying sticky mess. My advice, if you must absolutely have these, is to use the Avent nipples on these bottles. They fit and they don't leak at all, even upside-down. The silicone nipple is not implicated in the Bisphenol problems. The Born Free bottles also have a silicone gasket and a plastic insert, making cleaning and filling the bottles very frustrating and unnecessarily complex. I am hoping someone else comes up with a better BSA-free bottle because these are just not working for me.
Nipple collapses all the time! July 21, 2008 I just got this bottle because they are BPA free, my son like his milk warm. The problem I have is that the nipples collapse all the time, I use th Y nipple. I love the Avent bottle ant now they have BPA free bottles that you can combine with your old nipples. BornFree nipples are very expensive. I have tried everything and I think Avent is just the best. Dr. Browns are difficult to clean and time consuming to assemble. Avent is simple , nipples never collapse, and those who say that they leak it's because they are not closing it properly. Mine have never leaked. I also was very disappointed because I bought a 9oz three pack and when I got them there was only one vent valve included for 3 bottles. I have a coupon to get the other 2 vent systems for "free". Why would they not include it in the package? I have been at the store to redeem the coupon and they are always out.
Potentially dangerous, and the worst customer service ever! July 21, 2008 I happily bought six of these bottles (four from Amazon and two from Whole Foods), since i was looking for BPA-free bottles. The bottles morphed into unrecognizable white and crystallized blobs, one after the other (I stopped using them when this happened with the third one). They all started out with a small white mark near the mouth of the bottle, and did the bizarre morphing thing soon afterwards. I had the bottles in the microwave sterilizer with both a Dr. Brown and an Avent bottle, neither one of which had any problems.
I would love to post a photo of the blob because I am convinced that anything that could turn into THAT cannot be good for my baby.
The worst was that I could not get a response from the company. I wrote emails, I spoke to one of their customer service reps, wrote more emails...and nothing came of any of it. I then reported to the Better Business Bureau in their region (Louisiana), which wrote me back several weeks later to say that THEY had not gotten any response from the company either.
My daughter is the most precious thing in the world to me...would I trust her well-being to a company that produces a flawed product and THEN refuses to respond to legitimate concerns, even from the Better Business Bureau? HECK, NO! I would urge everyone to take care before buying this bottle.
Bottles are fine once you get used to all the parts July 13, 2008 We bought the Born Free bottles because they were the only wide nipple, BPA FREE bottles available at the time. Our son ajusted well to the new nipples (he had been using Avent nipples for about 8 months). In fact, he seemed to like them better. The bottle itself isn't too bad if you are just putting breast milk in it, but you have to be careful if you are mixing formula in the bottle. There is a slit in the air vent that gets blocked every so often even when you mix the formula side to side. Once the vent is blocked no air is allowed in the bottle and it interupts drinking which is very annoying--especially when you are trying to get your baby to sleep!
Might be for you, but not worth it for me July 10, 2008 My wife wanted these because they're supposed to be the safest. They're also expensive. The twin pack I saw in the store came with two vents (one for each bottle) but curiously the 3-pack came with only 1 vent. But you can't use the bottle without the vent. The vent sticks up a quarter inch above the rim of the bottle, so if you screw the nipple on without the vent it will leak.
We were used to the Evenflo nipples with the integrated "vent" (two air-holes) so I forgot that if you took the BornFree vent out that it would also create a vacuum inside the bottle when baby sucks.
Pros: BPA-free (and free of basically any other known contaminants as well), special vent
Cons: pricey, special vent requires extra effort every time you make a bottle or clean the bottle
Born Free also offers a glass version. If you want glass, it might be a good vented, wide-neck alternative to the Evenflo glass bottles.
Also, I have read that Dr Brown's wide neck vent system can fit on Born Free Bottles. So if you're a fan of Dr Brown's (who makes a standard neck glass bottle) but you want a wide neck bottle, then Born Free Glass might be for you.
I would recommend these only if your baby needs a wide neck bottle/nipple and needs the special anti-colic vent. Why would they need these? The wide bottles are supposed to help breast-fed babies transition to bottles because the shape is more natural. The venting system, well, if your baby has colic you probably know it.
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