A commercial-grade blender with legitimate power and preset cycles that does everything it promises, but nobody writes home about it. The real problem is the near-total absence of long-term owner voices: enthusiast forums treat it as the fallback when a Vitamix deal falls through, not the first choice, and you won't find the deep bench of multi-year testimonials that make a $400 appliance feel like a safe bet. If you can grab one heavily discounted or need the compact 7-inch footprint, it will blend anything you throw at it. At full retail against Vitamix, you're buying the brand fewer people stuck with long enough to become advocates.
A retro-styled workhorse that blends beautifully until its own parts betray it. Jar seals fail after 12 to 24 months, leaking brown or black liquid from the base directly into your food, and KitchenAid refuses to sell replacement gaskets separately, you must buy an entirely new jar for roughly half the blender's original price. Motor burnout and smoking within 18 months add to the reliability nightmare. If you want smooth smoothies and can stomach replacing the jar every couple years, the performance is there; if you expect a premium appliance to last without nickel-and-diming you on proprietary parts, walk away.