S(+)TMs: Give us the pros and cons of what you have, or ask about what you want. What brand(s) have you used? Which one is best and why? Are you dreaming of any that are on the market now? Battery powered or outlet? What are the best accessories? How did you go about getting one through your insurance?
FTMs: What brands are you interested in? What questions do you have?
Re: Product Spotlight: Breast Pumps
Once I returned to work and we settled into a routine, I only pumped on Fridays when DS stayed home with dad. He was enrolled in my infant class M-Th and he nursed there. Mostly he nursed at night, when he had me to himself. This baby will come to work M-F because that’s the schedule DS is on. I’ll probably still need a pump just in case. I gave the old pump to a friend who had to pump and bottle feed.
All that to say...
I had a Spectra S2 I brought to the hospital with me, so the LC there could do hands-on instruction and make sure it all fit right. I liked that I didn't need to actually plug it into a wall to work (it has a battery that could charge up while not in use), so that freed up where I could pump, but it still wasn't portable. And then a friend passed along her Medela Freestyle (note: ONLY share a closed-system pump, since open-system has no way to be sanitized -- this one was closed) and oh my god that was life changing. I could clip it to my shorts and go about my chores, and half the time I forgot I even had it on. It's not discreet in the slightest -- it's loud, and uses the standard type flanges rather than the in-bra cups, but it got the job done and did just as well as my hospital grade Spectra without requiring me to sit in one place for 20 minutes four times a day.
I'm not planning on trying to nurse this time around, and might pump sporadically depending on how formula is looking come summer, but if I do, I won't do anything without it being a portable pump. Absolutely not.
Side note -- I think, in the US anyway, insurance is required to cover a pump once per year. If you don't need yours, it might be worth calling around to pregnancy centers or homeless shelters near you to see if they could use a donated one (especially new/unused). A lot of places don't take them used (like Goodwill or Salvation Army) but pregnancy centers or homeless shelters will often accept closed system pumps or new pumps, to help women who had to flee domestic violence situations or are living in a car or even just who got a pump their body doesn't respond to that need a new one but can't afford it. I'm planning to see what my insurance will cover for a portable one, just in case, and then donating my two old closed system pumps (as well as whatever I get this time) when I'm for sure done.