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That's a top rate, near-professional machine. I have one, too.
Quote from: George on November 05, 2010, 04:49 PMThat's a top rate, near-professional machine. I have one, too.In that case, you may be able to advise me : KD recommends liquidising the onion/garlic/ginger/water mixture and the peeled plum tomatoes for two minutes : is this well within the Major's abilities, or is it safer to liquidise for (say) one minute, give things a chance to cool down, and then repeat the exercise ?
In Those machines are built like tanks and should last 25-50 years apart from just one aspect which may need attention after, say 10-15 years, and that's the electronics which control the speed from slow to fast. On a slow speed, there can be more of a load/demand on the electronics than on a high speed. If you smell any burning, let alone see smoke on the lowest speed, let me know and I'll tell you more! Which model number is yours, exactly?
The good news is that for liquidising using the top jug (not the main bowl) you normally use the highest speed. Be sure you do.
All being well, you could leave it on for many minutes without a problem. For blending, it will knock any hand held blender into a cocked hat. I might give it a break after 10 minutes but probably not less, unless it specifically states a time limit in the instruction book. Do you have one? I do, but I'll need to find it.
And in fact, the instructions say : "MOST IMPORTANT : When running the liquidiser the maximum time per run must not exceed three minutes with an interval of one minute between runs, otherwise the goblet and drive coupling may be damaged."
If the speed will not increase beyond 6, it may not be reaching the lowest speeds.