![]() ![]() This appliance was sent to me by one of my readers, and it has taken me months to find an entire day to do this one justice - because when I opened the box, I had to unwrap all the many pieces of what I eventually determined to be three separate-but-ambiguously-similar-looking multi-purpose, multi-component food processing appliances from different manufacturers (models with which I was unfamiliar) – combined and shipped together in a single very large box figure out what everything was, which pieces went with which systems, figure out how all the subassemblies went together, and what the design/use of each was (exactly) – so I could understand how to describe/identify each of the components and report on belonged together clean, photograph, test and write up everything. This was certainly not the first time I have had to stop and figure out and assemble a puzzle of sorts before I could begin to hope to commence testing, but this one kept slipping out of the queue, due to the much greater time required to sort it all out and the complexity of the required testing given the sheer number of different elements to test. The array of material classes and sub-classes in this food processor include: several different plastics, varying in color – as well as rubber, in some handle elements and the electrical cord stainless steel blades and accessories brass alloy electrical plug components, and more! Here’s an Amazon affiliate link for this product if you want to check it out online (I think this might be the newer model): It also features a variety of different substrates. For the record, and as an example of the complexity of some of the XRF testing I do, this Braun multi-function handheld blender/food processor was a very challenging, extremely time-consuming item to test - with more than 2 4 separate XRF-accessible elements .
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