I received the Philips pasta maker from Costco and the machine is awesome! I'm making fresh fettuccine noodle right now and it's a breeze. The machine is quieter than I expected and lot faster too. My wife is very happy.
I found the asian noodle discs on eBay for about $43 shipped. I'm going to order it now. I was holding off to see if I liked this machine enough to keep but even after one use, I know this Philips pasta maker is a keeper and we will be using it a lot. A huge thumbs up!
Excellent!! If you want to get into food storage:
1. Bulk storage pails: I use food storage pails to store my flour, which I buy in 25 or 50-pound bags from a local restaurant store ($14 for 50 pounds of all-purpose flour, woot woot!). 5-gallon is the standard size, although I buy 6 gallon pails for a little more headroom (make sure they're food-safe pails, not the ones from Home Depot!). You can get small 3-gallon ones or big 7-gallon ones too, although those can be a bit unwieldy.
The lids blow chunks, you need a special tool to pry them open. Instead, I buy gamma-seal lids. There's a ring you press on, then there's a corkscrew lid with a gasket that you spin on to seal it. VERY easy. I have a ton of these...jasmine rice, basmati rice, sugar, flour, etc. I keep them in the basement under the stairs for storage. Food-grade buckets & gamma-seal lids aren't cheap, but they last pretty much forever, so they are a good investment if you want to make food at home.
2. Kitchen large storage: For in-kitchen storage amounts for daily usage, I use OXO metal POP containers. The 2.4qt fit in my cabinets: ($21/ea)
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0051T93TE/
The 4qt ones ($23/ea) are taller & are better suited for stuff you use a lot of, like flour in pasta or cookies:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0051T96P0
They aren't cheap, but they are pretty durable & do a good job sealing up the lid when you press the button
3. Kitchen small storage: For even smaller amounts (ex. I buy "bulk" baking soda & baking powder from Walmart), I use mason jars with plastic screw-on lids (instead of the stock 2-piece metal ring & plate lid system). So like for your pasta, I buy a small bag of durum semolina flour for dusting onto the finished all-purpose flour noodles to help dry them out a bit & prevent them from sticking.
4. Labeling: For the easy identification of bucket contents, I either use blue painter's tape & a Sharpie or else my little Brother label maker. I used to use chalkboard stickers & chalk ink pens, which look really nice, but it's easy to rub the words off & those stickers get expensive.
This system helps me find what I need (thanks to the labels), helps keep my kitchen organized (no messy bags or boxes for spills, everything is neat & clean in glass or plastic jars & bins), and lets me refill those containers cheaply from my bulk food pail storage. You'll be amazed at what you can do with your food storage too...freshly-made pasta, no-knead bread, pizza dough, brownies from scratch, etc. And everything tastes awesome...no preservatives or chemicals, you can use whatever premium ingredients you'd like & tweak the recipe to fit your palette. I'm not a pro at it yet, but I've learned enough over the last few years to set up a pretty solid system for making really delicious homemade food easily using tools like the Instant Pot, Anova, Philips Pasta Maker, and my food storage system with buckets & containers. Here's some NY-style pizza dough (60 seconds in the food processor to make, that's it! then let it chill in the fridge overnight, good for up to 5 days, can be frozen, can make pizza/breadsticks/calzones with it). Did a pepperoni pizza on the Baking Steel indoors the other day, so easy:
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/07/basic-new-york-style-pizza-dough.html
No-knead bread:
Soft-batch peanut-butter cookies:
Loaded baked potatoes with pulled pork from the Instant Pot:
#TeamAppliances yo