Breville BL18 Blender Brushed Stainless Steel
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| List Price: | £49.99 |
| Price: | £48.38 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
6 new or used available from £43.50
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #44632 in Kitchen & Housewares
- Brand: Pulse Home Products
- Model: 5011773021630
Features
- 600 watts
- 1.5 Litre glass jug
- Removable stainless steel blades for easy cleaning
- Ice crush feature
- 3 Speeds & pulse
Editorial Reviews
Manufacturer's Description
Breville style & innovation for today's kitchen. The Breville Blender with a powerful 600 watt motor blends easily and efficiently. It has removable stainless steel blades for easy cleaning. The base is stylish brushed stainless steel and has 3 speeds plus a pulse action and ice crush feature. The Breville blender features a durable glass jug. A drinks booklet is included.
Box Contents
Customer Reviews
Nice looking blender but has a few issues
Really nice looking blender and performs very well however, the following issues may be considered.....
1 - it is very unstable on the base due to an odd shaped plastic skirt around the bottom of the glass jug. I have nearly knocked it off several times and being glass it will break in a dramatic way.
2 - the top lid of the jug has a curious and in my opinion pointless plastic insert. the insert is a very odd shape and becomes clogged with debris and is very hard to clean.
3 - the plastic on / off dial sticks badly after a while and you have to force it. no doubt soon it will shear off in my hand?
4 - the speed settings (of which there are many) dont seem to be any different, except the ice setting which nearly launches the lid off!
5 - the blades appear to be set too high and doesnt always get all the fruit etc being blended.
But all said and done, despite the above fairly critical points, i would probably buy another as it has out lived the last 3 i have owned by a long way.
Nicest blender, but there's a lot we don't know
I usd to work in a kitchen and I got to know what good kit is all about. Here's my pre-purchase preview of this product.
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This thing looks great with its stainless steel clothes and its perfect waist and its understated controls, but there's so little info on this site that you are reduced to going elsewhere to find out that (a) the jug is glass (classy yes, but very breakable, and there are *no spares*) and (b) it can crush ice, or so it is said. Quite a few manufacturers say their blender can crush ice but they actually can't really do it, or they do it until the edge is off the blades two weeks after you get the thing.
But here is where I have my real problems buying this, much as I would like to on the basis of its looks.
(i) No push-rod. This is a rod that goes through the lid that can be used to push the ingredients down towards the blades. It is important because without an infinitely variable speed control with which to perform a slow start, or an automatic soft-start function, light, dryish ingredients will get kicked up onto the sides of the jug right at the outset of blending and stay there untouched by the blades. The only way to get them back down again is take the lid off and mess about with a wooden spoon and this is a pain because you may have to do it three or four times before everything gets mushed together enough to stay put. American blenders very often have push rods but not so here in the UK. Why? I suspect it is becuase they look odd and manufacturers are in the business of selling stuff, not troubling people with useful but poorly understood tools.
(ii) Are the blades are set low enough? A lot of belnders have the blades set too high and, as a result, heavy, sticky food, which is not part of a liquid blend, gets stuck on the base of the jug under the blades and is never processed. The problem arises because manufactuers do not test blenders with a wide variety of ingredients.
(iii) Are the seals sound? Very often the seals go on blenders and then they leak, sometimes right into the motor! Like I say, there are no spares for Breville blenders so the seals have to last. Do they?
(iv) does the jug locate easily and is the safety system unintrusive in normal use. Second only to appearance manufacturers are concerned to make their blenders safe. They put these two far above effectiveness and ease of use becuase of the high cost of claims. You have to sell a lot of blenders to pay off a £400k lawsuit, but nobody can prosecute you because your blender is a pain in the... to operate becuase of all the clumsy safety interlocks.
(v) Is the motor tough? In the US you can get blenders of 2000 Watts or more. In the UK we think a big blnder is 800W. This one is 600W, which is pretty weedy, so they question is, can it hack tough usage? Most of them can't. If you check out the reviews on Amazon you will find that the biggest problem with blenders, irrespective of price is that they fail - constantly - and the biggest cause of that is the motor.
The bottom line is that unless you buy a commercial unit you need a shovelful of luck when buying a blender, or you just have to face the fact that it is very unlikely to last and buy on that basis. Home blenders look great and they are as mostly pretty safe, but they do not usually work well and they almost never last.
As to this one, who knows? Any reviewer out there got the goods?
Even knowing all this I'll probably just spend the money anyway on the off-chance the thing is OK for a couple of years...
Good BUT
Bought one of these a year ago - very hapy with it until one week after the the year's guarantee ran out I put some small cubes of hard cheese in along with some cooked veg and a the jug cracked after about 30 secs - not sure why but no spares and now I have to buy a new one - so mixed feelings about this.



