Guest guest Posted February 27, 2012 Report Share Posted February 27, 2012 ew you state <snip> " Simone, I did a lot of research and went with the Blendtec. Blendtec sued Vitamix for patent infringements and won $24 million. Blentec is also slightly cheaper. [ ] Check their web site about demo shows near you. The sell them at even a better price then [ ]ew < Ernst -- you say " I did a lot of research and went with the Blentec. . . . " I do thank you for your research - but 'what is right for one may be wrong for another'. PLEASE SHARE YOUR RESEARCH WITH THE GROUP -- just saying you did your research doesn't really answer anything at all except that you felt, after you did your research, that YOU FELT BLENTC WAS BEST FOR ***YOU***. Now I KNOW that this only half the story, or there would only be one product out there. Would you please tell me -- or better yet, share with the group exactly what material you used to evaluate each product, how you gave more weight to one claim than another -- eg claim #1 was verified by a disinterested lab with no ties to the findings one way or another and claim #2 was made by the in-house lab of the corporate itself. I know I would PROBABLY give more weight to an " apparent " independent lab than a lab which appeared more dependent upon the maker for funding. So simply as a single individual -- I would like to know what material you looked at, what each piece of material said, why you believed one piece of evidence more than another - and finally WHY you chose one product over another. You mention going to a seminar(?) or (demonstration) -- did you go to both close enough together in time that you'd be able to remember them both so you still had the salient points in your mind and weren't swept up in the emotion of one over the other because it was closer in time, or because the salesman had a better pitch? I know that often I'd travel several hundred miles one way to compare lab equipment, and have to go back to the first presentations a second time because the 'magic of the moment' was lost on me, and I wondered exactly WHY I was thinking of spending $4, 000 more for one set of research scopes than another, or when I AM looking for a computer for myself exactly WHY I am looking at a $1, 000 difference between Computer A, B and C when they all see very much the same. And remember: Oh! Duh! it's the 7200 RPM hard-drive of a proven reliability over the far cheaper but larger 5900 RPM hard drive of another maker -- or that the speed measurement is for the front end bus and not the through-put-speed!!! We also simply don't know WHY or WHAT The patent infringement was -- it can be as simple as using one kind of seal to protect a motor from moisture that works better than another - or it could be that a cheaper way was found to protect the motor from moisture than another -- however while it's cheaper doesn't mean it's better (or worse). So a patent suit might win because if you thicken a motor shaft, THEN put on a silicone seal that looks like a bobbin from a sewing machine the seal will LOOK like it does a better job -- but while you use a silicone material which has a life expectancy of 3 years, and I take the idea of using the 'double seal where each flange of the seal helps keep part of the shaft dry(er) I use a more reactive product which allows the inclusion of a substance which is an FDA approved antifungalagent that is held in time-release capsules which out-gas over several years, and keep the hard-to-clean area free from fungal growth -- So I've taken the idea of a 'double flange' seal (the patent) and use a different material that 1) lasts longer and/or 2) is impregnated with anti-bacterial agents to make processing food 'safer' -- and I have 'lost' a patent war. Or I have even simply 'settled' out of court because it's cheaper to pay off a court fine than it is to pay a lawyer and drag out the problem for YEARS than it is to settle things now. Several times I've simply dropped a suit against a tenant than to pursue it since I'll never see any money out of the tenant and it's cheaper to replace a broken window, replace the stove they used for a heater when they ran out of credit for their heating oil -- and called it a day, than to take them to court, fight it for two or three years, and end up with what I had to get anyway - a new stove -- and if I DID win -- what are the chances that the tenant would pay me back for the stove and window without a SECOND law suit to attach their wages, at $10 a month for 100 months plus interest and attorney fees? Let the suit go - it's VERY common in commercial settings. It might be something as simple as using a horizontal over a vertical shaft, or a worm gear over a syncromesh gear. So winning or losing a 'patent' war may or may not be significant -- they happen ALL the time between major manufacturers. GRANDpa had a steam jet he put in an old Kenmore gas dryer back in the 1950's -- now I see one being advertized somewhere - should I sue them and point out that my Grandfather had used EXACTLY the same principal in the late 1950's and early 1960's to keep our work-clothes wrinkle free? Saying a company won a patent suit MIGHT be significant,but it doesn't mean one company is better than another, it just means that they both came up the a similar solution - a solution to a common problem can often had a common or similar remedy. can be proven to be TOO simple. I think EVERYONE will have a good laugh at this patent which was approved by the Government of Australia recently issued a patent for a " " circular transportation facilitation device " (see ref: 2 August 2001 PDF document: http://www.ipmenu.com/archive/AUI_2001100012.pdf) published: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn965-wheel-patented-in-australia.html    etc + multiple other-cites) Now SOMETHING made you decide from your research that one machine was better than another -- it could be something as intangible as it had a cord the right lengh for your work space not requiring an extension cord, nor a careful way to coil and store the excess, to a color which you or your significant other found pleasing, to the general overall quality of the brand, or it's general length of service before a major repair, to things as mundane as the cost vs your income, the ability to purchase it sans interest over X number of days/weeks/months, the fact that it was made from one type of plastic over another, to be constructed of a plastic covered type of metal (ferrous or non- ferrous) or the fact that it was made from powder-coated, enameled, or a plated base (or elemental) metal. Since you have done the research, I would like to ask that you share it with us as a group so that we don't have to re-create your time and energy of collecting, reading, sorting through, and finally deciding upon an interpretation of the facts as you perceived them to be presented. I know that often I am VERY surprised when I read independent research into various items and find the conclusions drawn to be opposite my own observation or experience with the same brand. For example Consumer's Union -- a US company which publishes _Consumer Reports_ a magazine which does not take a penny in advertizing and does not allow even it's NAME to be used in adverting, nor in any article which implies one product is better than another. I saw, that it listed a VERY low cost, and generally considered to be a very low quality producer of electronic equipment, Radio Shack, as earning a rating of a cassette tape recorder as #1 or #2 overall in it's scoring system. I pondered this for quite a while, and finally made a personal judgement call that they rated the product _in situ_ , meaning: (lit) in it's original position. Now my experience is that -- from their TRS 1900 AND TRS 2000 Computers to their cassette tape recorders to their Volt-Ohm-amp meteres -- they produced a quality just the near side of 'poop'. And could NOT figure out how they always seemed to rate so highly. The answer is simply that they did not move them as part of the test -- it was not a 'real life' test! -- If you bought a Radio Shack VOM or Cassette recorder and never moved it - except to open the box and let it it sit there, unused and unmoved - it worked just fine. the moment you started to use it, it fell apart, the plastic was so poorly blended that it cracked, and the pot's controlling the volume, balance, etc were so poorly made that they, also, simply fell apart. So when I read that you took the time to gather the material together to do research, then DID the research -- and came away with the informed opinion that one brand out shone the others -- I would very much like to know EXACTLY WHY you made that decision. I hope to not seem too rude - or rude at all - or to seem as if I did not believe you - for I may well believe you -- I simply don't know WHY one would want more than a simple blender -- and that is me, personally. I think you owe it to others to share your journey of inquiry to others might not be lead down the (to you) misguided road. I know you have insights that are important to you, and would like you to share them with the group. I use pressure cookers - a LOT, and am sold on the Kunh-Rikon brand. Some of why is based upon research in the real sense of the word - looking through reams of paper generated by labs showing specific heat, gradient of heat transfer over time, time of temperature rise vs cooking time, etc. Stuff I got off the web and out of trade mags where the audience was NOT people like you or me, but other manufactures, and folks like NASA where, if you use their material, you have to publish the findings from YOUR studies of the material under the conditions you use it. This is so they can learn more about applications their engineers had not considered. (I learned this nifty bit of data when I was buying a top-of-the-line winter-jacket to take the blistering cold winds of the Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, and Wyoming plains - and the jacket used a fiber called 'out-last' the brand name they gave it. I was a fiber which took heat from one place -- say under your arms -- and redistributed it around the threads in all other parts of the coat, so when you stopped moving, your coat would stay warm -- ALL OVER, and slowly re-radiate heat back into the environment - hot or cold -- it was synthetic so didn't follow the 'Law of Wet Down' - " If down gets wet, you will die'. NASA used this information to improve the design of their own materials.  Though I do admit that MOST of what I used when I went to pick out a pressure cooker was based upon a VERY biased report from an old girlfriend I went to Grad School with and who described the plights of living on a sail boat in the south pacific -- the perils of running out of fuel -- and now this brand of pressure cooker paid for itself in retail (she got it through permission to rummage under international salvage law when a boat was declared abandoned and open to salvage) over a period of LESS than a year. And did it in DEAD SILENCE. Coupled with the input of several (3?4?5? more?) friends who were attending the San Francisco Culinary Arts Institute and an ASL interpreter of some classes on the use of a pressure cooker -- I had two people bring one up -- and was sold instantly - and when it brought water to pressure on top of my old wood/gas combination stove I was SOLD - not just because it was able to so it faster than any other pressure cooker I had (old weighted Presto and Wisconson Foundry canning and cooking pressure cookers) - but did it in DEAD SILENCE!!!! IN fact, before I had bubbles around my boiling stone, I had water simmering in the Kunh-Rikon and the pressure button had popped up showing it was starting to build heat and pressure. Not to get too side tracked, though it's probably too late now - How COULD you you tell it was 'over pressure' if you could hear it. Well, it was over-pressure WHEN you heard it, OR when it was louder than the burner on the stove-- and for me the FINAL test was that it would cook 4 literes of mixed bean, grain, and legume soup over my emergency camp stove using a dirty kerosceine-disel mix at about 6500-7000 feet - in the same length of time it took me to cook it on a regular kitchen stove in my kitchen. It would also cook 3 large artichokes in TWO TABLESPOONS OF WATER in 8 minutes !!!!!! - now THAT'S empirical evidence that's NOT provided in literature -- though it's easily replicated by anyone in the length of time it takes to heat-boil-and pressurize a given volume of water in a pot of an equivalent volume of water. That's evidence worth sharing. Which I just did. And I wonder if you would share with the group what made you decide what made you choose your brand other other brands -- and I think that the rest of the group is mature enough that they will respect your decision, and the way you made it, even if it's not the way THEY would make their decision. I've always believed that there are always MANY ways to 'pluck a chicken' - none of which are wrong -- and there are MANY ways to cook a chicken most of which are pretty darned good! -- So, in order for an 'open exchange of ideas' to work, we each have to accept the journey and experiences of others - and know that the reasons for one person are just as valid as for another person--- like a very good friend used to always tell me - if you want the freedom to make a mistake, you have to give that freedom to another. I also know that a lot of times a person with a very valid point of view won't speak up because they are afraid that others will attack them -- and while I can't speak for anyone but me -- I HOPE I can assure you that the group will treat your choice as the right one for you - and I for one am very curious WHY you made the choice you made - I do thank you in advance. Oh, and I too find 'refurbished' the best deal around, I have an absolute top of the line Dell computer I bought about 10 years ago that's JUST beginning t fail me in memory -- it only takes 2 Gigs up front, but that was maxed out when I got it - It came though the line as a 'return' model - and I grabbed it -- and 10 years later, running 24 hours a day 7 days a week for 10 years, with the exception of the once a week shut down do defrag and do minor maintenance it's worked just fine - and it's only because it will no longer multitask -- run graphic intensive programs AND run long-string-algorithms for statistical annalists that I'm finding that I have some stack-overflow problems that pop up overnight when I'm running a program I have now given priority to -- so this computer and one other, an early SONY VAIO for high-intensity graphics work are the only two comptuers I have owned in my professional work and both lasted close to 10 years, both ran 24/7 and I do swear by the 'they look at them twice' principal. If the warranty off the end of the line is the same, I don't hesitate and I've buried MANY - perhaps countless comptuers my office mate has gotten over the years -- he used computer supplied by the U and I always used my own so ANY work done on my computer belongs to ME and not the University and let my office mate run my issued computer as a slave to his. So from past experience, I've found refurbished machines tend to run one generation behind (or that's where I buy them, at the VERY end of the year), is about 3/4-2/3 the cost of the brand new current model, and carries the same warranty. And non-electronic things I have no problem at all with them. Except now e-bay is pretty standardized and 'good deals' are VERY hard to find. So=-= I really would like a DETAILED run down by PERSONAL experience and RESEARCH (!!!!) Why one machine is better than the next. I've tended to find that -- well I'll just wait and learn. thanks all. -- paul -- So often I don't honestly SEE the need for fancy new equiptment - as I wrote VERY early on in my correspondanc with the oup -- I didn't undertsant the need for a juicer over a blender - or the need for plastic or metal -- very energy intensive and resource hogging industries to produce a seeded, when most of the older texts talk about pany hose, linnen, cotton, and berlap as 'seed beds' for sprouting - seeds. In fact I tend to recall many people still mentioning thse things as ways to determine how to find the seeds which are good for you to use and to find the types of seeds which you are going to enjoy uising in your diet, so you can pick the 'more' correct 'commercial' machines which fit your seeding life-style. I honeslty do not mean to come off sounding hostile - I would just like to see the data you used in making your informed decison - and to follow you thorugh that process so I can understand what critria you use to choose 'good' over 'bad', or 'better' orver 'worse' in your decision makeing. If we all share this data with each other -- we aren't left out in the dark -- or choosing a machine which suits YOU perfectly, but would not sever me at all well -- not well at BEST -- and absolutely not at all at the worst! -- I do thank you in advance and look forward to your reply. And if you DO feel offended, or put off, please excuse me -- it was not my intention - I am hopeing to help improve the decisons made by people on this list so we all understand that a decison made by you is the perfect decsion for me as well - AND that perhaps a reason you chose to NOT buy something is EXACTLY the reason I need to buy one for ME or a friend! - - Thank you in advance, and, again, I do not mean to make you feel ill-at-ease in the least bit! Just trying to get a free exchance of information so we can all use the time and energy we each put forth individually and put it in a form that can be used by all to make a decision perfect for them as individuals. It need not be SPECIFIC - so for example - on my research for a new pair of snow boots this year, I leanred the my (perhaps our) beloved Sorel's were sold out to the compnay which makes " Colombia " and are now made at the 'piece-rate' method in Vietnam (not a place noted for leaking boots equaling death on the trail) -- and that what appears to be an inordinate number of comments by buyers menion that 1) the seams leak 2) the boots are now narrower than they used to be, 3) the toungue of many boots seem to 'crap' and not maintain the same shape you carefully break them in at -- often mentining that the sewing at the stitching at the toungue seems to not run true and straight that may force the tounge out of allingment, 4) extra layers of socks tend to 'bind' the boot and finally 5) the 'leather-synthetic' boundry seperates (often with cracks in the synthetic leading to out-right holes you can put your finger or thum though) after only a few months of constant wearing. So it's good-by to the beloved family friends that belonged to your great-great grandparents forward -- no longer will a single pair last you 3-10 years, not the top seems to be 10- years, and the 'life time guarentee' - ??? - it's still there -- for what ever 'the life-time of the boot' means. While I LOVE the removeable lining of the Sorel - when I was buying a pair of low temp-rough use-thermal boots -- I was faced with three boots - and I chose the Cabella's boot rated at -150*F only because it was on sale at less than half price and $200 less than the one I would have picked - the Baffin Explorer rated weak only in water-proffing (80% said water proof, but not 100%) but I can turn not-water-proof, into waterproof with warmed to liquid waxs and oil -- and they'll stay waterproof even after many days on the trail. -- but at $200CAN and the Cabela's at $70 US incluing shiping, doens't take a calculator to figure the exchange rate - and the Cabellas are rated water proof and for -140*F (the inferno) - so that's kind of how I rated the boots I was looking at, and why I chose the ones I chose.                  Dream Well. Travel Well.  May you Walk Your Path in Beauty. " Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. " Carl Sagan. >________________________________ > >To: sproutpeople >Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 11:18 AM >Subject: Re: Vitamix model > > > >Simone, I did a lot of research and went with the Blendtec. >Blendtec sued Vitamix for patent infringements and won $24 million. >Blentec is also slightly cheaper. >Check their web site about demo shows near you. The sell them at even a better price then >ew > > Vitamix model > >Thinking about finally getting a Vitamix, although my blender makes great >smoothies with sprouts, but may want to go a bit further with leafy greens >at times ... so I've been looking around and have found a lot of people >recommend getting the model without the variable speed knob, saying it is >not necessary, that you can just go from low to high and that's sufficient. > >Any thoughts on the model? > >I'm looking at the 1782 at Amazon which sells for 378.95, free shipping. > >Thanks in advance for your input -- >Simone > >Simone Karsman >Certified Holistic Aromatherapist >www.FlutterbyeAromatics.com >Savannah GA >skarsman%40gmail.com > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2012 Report Share Posted February 27, 2012 was just trying to be friendly and not appear rude.  Please tell me what 'evidence' you reviewed, and explain what made you chose one over the other - please compare and contrast the machines and give specific reasons why one machine met which needs you had the best. While you are at it, please explain in detail the details that you liked about he machine you did NOT choose. Thanks. I'm sure everyone on the list can learn from your research, and it would seem to be to be selfish not to share it with everyone else the fruits of your labor. Why do something twice when we cal all learn from your efforts. thanks, paul  Dream Well. Travel Well.  May you Walk Your Path in Beauty. " Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. " Carl Sagan. >________________________________ > >To: sproutpeople >Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 12:02 PM >Subject: Re: Vitamix PLEASE EXPLAIN > > > >, >I choose to ignor this, as I do all of your rambling e-mails >ew > > Vitamix model >> >>Thinking about finally getting a Vitamix, although my blender makes great >>smoothies with sprouts, but may want to go a bit further with leafy greens >>at times ... so I've been looking around and have found a lot of people >>recommend getting the model without the variable speed knob, saying it is >>not necessary, that you can just go from low to high and that's sufficient. >> >>Any thoughts on the model? >> >>I'm looking at the 1782 at Amazon which sells for 378.95, free shipping. >> >>Thanks in advance for your input -- >>Simone >> >>Simone Karsman >>Certified Holistic Aromatherapist >>www.FlutterbyeAromatics.com >>Savannah GA >>skarsman%40gmail.com >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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