Sealed, In the Box, Never Used, Sunbeam Mixmaster 1-80

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countryguy

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Astorville, ON, Canada
I posted this on AW.org but thought I would post here also.

Thank you to Martin (Yogitunes) for sending me this Sunbeam Mixer that he grabbed from an 1800 Victorian home/funeral parlour that is going to be demolished. The mixer was in one of the pantries, purchased from a store that closed in 1980. The house has been sitting for 10-15 years, fully furnished but untouched. Martin grabbed himself a GE washer and dryer and several window A/C units.

The mixer was delivered today. Here are pics of the unboxing. Included was the instruction manual, recipe book, and plastic covers for the bowls.

Gary

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Beautiful...

It's such a timeless design, never looks dated. How cool to find one new in the box! I have one of those mixers that I pieced together over several years. It's a long story that I've told before. I'm still looking for the stainless steel bowls but the pair of glass ones I have work just fine in the meantime. I've also got a Mixmaster Vista, chrome with a brown base, that has the work light over the bowl.
 
Have a few of these

they are real work horses. They aren't as collectable as the older models. In a perfect world the older machines would be as powerful as these. With between 175-235 watt motors you can easily make cookie batter and bread dough. One thing though, you have to go easy when wiping down mixer after use, on some, the numbers and wording on the speed control can eventually wash right off the dial. A small chrome metal bowl cost me 30.00 back when you could still buy them in stores! Nice mixer!
 
Thanks everyone. I have a similiar model (you can see part of it in the background in the last pic) but not in quite as new condition as this one. I'm guessing it probably cost around $100 in the early 70s which would be over $600 in today's value. My mom had the harvest gold version with glass bowls.

Gary
 
That is a nice find. I like the Mixmaster mixers. I still have the one my mom bought for me when I got my own place.

I now have the heavy duty Kitchenaid mixer. I like that one also.
 
I bought my mom a Mixmaster mixer in the early 80's as a Christmas present, as I needed a mixer that would handle bread dough and other heavy batters.

That one had the light fixture so you could see in the work bowl. My dad about had a stroke. (I was in my early teens) I believe I paid around $120.00 at the time.

In 2008 I bought myself a Kitchen aid heavy duty model and bought my mom the Artisan model. one as a birthday present to myself and the other as a Christmas gift to mom again. (both bought in December a week apart.)
 
The Sunbeam Mixer is great for beating batters and adding air to batters to make them light and fluffy. I have had a couple of different KitchenAids and a Cuisinart but currently have a similiar Sunbeam Mixmaster and a Bosch Universal Plus ....now that machine is a work horse and can knead dough for several loaves of bread, make large batches of cookies, etc. but it can also make a stiff egg white with just one egg.

Gary
 
In recipes where I'll be using

the kitchen aid, if the recipe calls for creaming a stick of butter and sugar I usually do that in the Sunbeam first then bring it over to the kitchen aid bowl. A stick of butter gets smacked to the side of the KA bowl and the paddle isn't even making contact anymore. So a variety of mixers works for me! Nice that your Bosch Universal can whip just one egg!
 
Gary,

I saw your post and commented on AW, but it bears repeating.
Beautiful Mixmaster! I'd be lying if I said I wasn't a bit jealous!
I grew up with a chrome Mixmaster, and had to get myself one exactly like it when we got a house.
I believe it's the same as your other one in the background; with the stainless steel looking emblem.
We have a KitchenAid Artisan too, but the Sunbeam is my go-to.

Barry
 
My mother has a chrome Hamilton Beach mixer like the one in the photo in Reply #9, lower shelf, just above the water bottles. If I recall correctly, she got it as a wedding gift in 1961. My sister has a similar model in almond that she got as a wedding gift the first time around in 1988.

I just took a look on eBay and several sets of the stainless mixing bowls, no plastic lids, of course, are available right now for $30ish, including shipping. I'm just not sure whether I want to spend that much when I have perfectly serviceable glass bowls, one set for each mixer, already. I can't see that I'd be gaining anything in terms of functionality; I'd just be able to say that I have the "correct" bowls for the mixer. Whenever I see a stainless mixing bowl at a thrift shop, I always look for the Sunbeam logo on the bottom. It's the sort of thing I'll probably come across when I least expect it.
 
When I bought my complete mixer on eBay, it came with bowls that looked and worked right, until I looked for the logo. They're either aftermarket, or newer than the mixer, because there's no Sunbeam logo, and they say "Made in Hong Kong" or Taiwan or something.
I couldn't leave well enough alone. I had to buy a set of "correct" bowls for it. I don't remember what I paid for them. I did restrain myself somewhat. I don't think I paid more than $25 with shipping and all. I may have even bought them individually. I don't remember now.
And, like I said, the other ones were fine, unless you looked at the underside. So, I understand your kind of wanting the "correct" bowls, even though yours are fine.

Barry
 
@ kirbyklekter

You mentioned that the beater on your KA isn't close enough to the work bowl.

Have you adjusted the screw for the bowl lift if you have that model.

On the tilt head model. There is a screw on the underside of the power head to bring the beater closer to the bowl? The beater should just clear the work bowl.

Also on the bowl lift models watch that the attaching brackets aren't bent out of position. That can happen due to mixing heavy dough's and or just attaching and removing of the bowl.

I have adjusted mine a few times.

The owners manual that came with your mixer will give instructions on how to make adjustments to either machine for proper beater to bowl clearance.
 
Well, I went and did it...

So I found a set of stainless steel bowls that were flying a little bit below the proverbial radar and running the clock out with no bids so I pulled the trigger on them. It turns out the glass bowls go for about the same as the stainless ones so I'm going to list one set of my glass bowls after the stainless ones arrive. We'll see what happens. If I'm lucky, I'll have upgraded for little or no cost. Although both of my mixers would have originally come with the stainless steel bowls, I plan to keep one set of glass ones. They're vintage Sunbeam-branded Fire King bowls with little spouts on the rim.
 

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