This $80 workhorse obliterates ice and frozen fruit with genuine power, throws in auto-blend presets and multiple container sizes, and costs a fraction of what Vitamix charges for similar crushing performance. The exposed blades have caused enough serious cuts during normal cleaning to spark lawsuits, so treat every pour and rinse like you're handling a mandoline, and the all-plastic build cracks if dropped or overfilled, with the cup-to-motor coupling typically wearing out in 1-3 years of heavy use. Buy it if you blend frozen drinks occasionally and can work around the square pitcher's corner-trapping design; skip it if you want daily silky green smoothies or need something that survives a decade of hard use.
This is Vitamix's luxury flagship with touchscreens, app connectivity, and a 10-year warranty, but expert testing shows it blends *worse* than the company's own $300 mechanical models while costing $620. The NFC container lock-in blocks aftermarket jars, small-batch performance is weak (lumpy nut butters, uneven chopping), and the Ascent series carries an active recall for blade separation that's caused 27+ lacerations. If you want Vitamix power and longevity, buy the 5200 or 7500 and pocket the savings. The A3500 makes sense only if you specifically value the digital timer, auto-programs, and dishwasher-safe containers enough to accept measurably weaker blending for double the money.