
List Price :
$14.99Price : $11.99
Code : B00005LD47
* Special discount only for limited time

Product Feature
- Ships in Certified Frustration-Free Packaging
- Replacement nylon-coated flat beater
- Use with KitchenAid KSM90 and K45 stand mixers
- Perfect for mixing cake batter, cookie dough, and more
- Handwash only; measures approximately 7-1/2 by 4-1/2 by 4-3/4 inches; 1-year warranty
Product Description
Mix up your favorite desserts with KitchenAid's flat beater. This nylon-coated attachment fits 4-1/2-quart KitchenAid stand mixers. The beater is perfect for mashing potatoes, mixing cake batter and cookie dough, and so much more.Amazon has certified this product's packaging is Frustration-Free. A Frustration-Free Package is easy-to-open and comes without excess packaging materials such as hard plastic "clamshell" casings, plastic bindings, and wire ties. It is exactly the same as a traditionally packaged product--we've just streamlined the packaging to be opened without the use of a box cutter or knife and will protect your product just as well as traditional packaging during shipping. Products with Frustration-Free Packaging can frequently be shipped in their own boxes, without the need for an additional shipping box.
Product Detail
- Amazon Sales Rank: #374 in Kitchen & Housewares
- Color: White
- Brand: KitchenAid
- Model: K45B
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 4.50" h x4.70" w x7.30" l,.50 pounds
Maybe you should visit the following website to get a better price and specification details
Related Seller :Product Reviews
257 of 260 people found the following review helpful.
Adjust your beater to bowl clearance to eliminate chipping
By Momof 3
After reading these reviews, it seems that many people do not check their beater to bowl clearance. If a beater is chipping on the bottom, it means that it is too low. Sometimes, if the beater chips on the top, it means that the beater is actually too high, and the head can not lock properly, which can cause bouncing and chipping. You can look in your use and care guide, or go to kitchenaid.com to watch a video on how to locate the adjustment screw. If the mixer doesn't incorporate the ingredients in the bottom of the bowl, then the beater is too far away from the bowl. If you have a tilt-head mixer, the adjustment screw is located in the neck of the mixer-in the hinge-when you lift up the head, you'll see it. You can place a dime in the bottom of the bowl, and turn the mixer to "stir". If the dime moves around continuously, it is too low. If it doesn't move at all, it is too high and can't reach everything. It should scoot the dime around the bowl 1/4-1/2" at a time. I've had my beater, which is used a lot, for about 5 years, and it has no chips. If you have a bowl lift mixer, the adjustment screw is behind the bowl clip. If it's adjusted properly, you get the best mixing and the least wear and tear on your beater and bowl. The adjustment can change slightly over time.
24 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
WHY doesn't Kitchenaid make these out of stainless steel???
By Nosewiper
I own two KA mixers and have used them heavily over twenty years. These beaters DO have a durability issue, and to me it'd be easy to remedy.
The older mixer came with a whip made completely of stainless steel, and the coated beater and dough hook were also of a more durable metal. At some point Kitchenaid started substituting aluminum-- a material which corrodes in the dishwasher, bubbles up (under the coatings, even) and results in cracked coatings and nasty-looking attachments which don't slide onto the mixer shank easily.
I see that some higher-end mixers are available with "burnished steel" attachments--this might be just what Kitchenaid needs to start offering for the lower-end mixers. Or they could just go back to whatever they were using 20 years ago. These beaters are just a big blemish on the face of what is a wonderful appliance.
46 of 51 people found the following review helpful.
Works fine for a year or so until it's ruined. Now looking for 3RD replacement for this "disposable" item.
By JAB
Who would've thought that these things wear out and must be discarded so often!?
I've previously purchased two of these as replacement beaters for our Mixer. They have each worked well for a year or so but then the plastic coating starts to wear away and falls off into your cookies/rolls/bread/whatever.
I honestly thought that the first time was a fluke but now that the second beater has shown the same problem I'd call it a flaw. I'm wondering if there is some other option for beaters that will NOT fall apart into my food after a year of mild to moderate use. I don't want to spend $15 every year on a stupid beater!
0 comments:
Post a Comment