Champion Juicer
Champion Juicer
Heavy duty front and rear ball bearing installation for smoother
running, maximum R.P.M.'S. Added winding capacity which increases
starting torque and allows the motor to run cooler increasing the
durability factor and performance under heavy use conditions. Blades are
made of tempered stainless steel. They never separate and rust.
Versatile machine and can juice all types of fruits and vegetables.
Cannot juice wheatgrass.
Champion Juicer
Makes nut butters, frozen fruit sorbets, baby foods, ice creams,
sherbets, purees, salsa, muesli and more. All parts are FDA approved.
Versatile design can also make fruit sauces, baby foods, nut butters,
ice cream, sherbets and fruit smoothies. -No intermittent cleaning
required - a floating cutter effectively separates the juice from the
pulp in one quiet, continuous - and seemingly effortless - operation.
Made in the USA. 1725 RPM's and will max out at 616 watts. Assembly
Instructions: -Designed with simplicity in mind - no nuts, bolts, screws
or clamps. Assembly can be completed in seconds. Variable 110/220 volt
50/60 hertz. Can be converted for domestic or overseas use.
Champion Juicer
Before considering reviews of juicers, the first
thing the reader needs to examine is the experience of the reviewer.
I've noticed that dozens of these reviews are by those new to juicing,
often assessing their first juicer purchase. They then are making
arbitrary statements about equipment of which they know little. Rather
like assessing a sewing machine, a camera, any piece of technology
without sufficient perspective.
Champion Juicer
began juicing back in the 70's when I became
vegetarian. At that time juicers were not considered fashionable as
now, and certainly there were no infomercials or cable! There was a
fairly inexpensive line of centrifugal juicers made by Braun, Krups,
Oster, etc. There was the Norwalk, still the Rolls-Royce of juicers (at
$2000+).
Champion Juicer
There was the excellent Acme centrifugal (now
sold as Omega). And there was the Champion, then selling for $250-300.
After chopping through a nice little Braun in a year or so I spent
hard-earned college earnings on a Champion; they only came in white
then. Much of of the hoopla about oxidation of juice hadn't come up
yet. We had no health food stores in Texas that I knew about that
carried the Champion, so I ordered mine over the phone.
Champion Juicer
I was shocked when it arrived at the weight. This
is no lightweight! Unlike the department store juicers, it has a very
large motor, a GE, with tons of torque. This is because this is a
masticating juicer with a slow-turning cutting cone. Without the cone
assembly on the front it is actually not large at all.
The 'plastic' parts on the Champion were/are nylon rather than just molded plastic. This means they are also quite flexible and are of course shatterproof.
The 'plastic' parts on the Champion were/are nylon rather than just molded plastic. This means they are also quite flexible and are of course shatterproof.
Champion Juicer
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