Magic Bullet blenders are dishwasher-safe, with cups, lids, and containers placed on the top rack of the dishwasher. The cups, lids, lip rings, and blades are made of durable materials like BPA-free plastic, making them easy to clean. The Magic Bullet Blender works like a standard blender, pulling ingredients down into the blade to create a vortex for pureeing. It can also pulse ingredients if desired.
The cups, lids, and lip rings of most Magic Bullet Blenders are dishwasher-safe, but the motor base should be carefully wiped down by hand. The Cross Blade is designed for chopping, grating, and blending foods such as onions, cheeses, meats, and frozen drinks, while the Flat Blade is used for whipping cream and grinding hard foods like coffee beans and spices.
Nutribullet cups, lids, lip rings, and blades are all top-rack and dishwasher-safe, but they should be rinsed before washing. Most blenders should be fine in the dishwasher, but some use plastic for the blending area, which may not be suitable for the dishwasher. Canisters and lids are dishwasher-safe (top shelf only), but the Power Base should not be submerged in water and unplugged before cleaning.
The Magic Bullet Blender is easy to use and has a capacity of 12 ounces. The cups and blades are dishwasher-safe, but the motor base should never be submerged in water. The blender is easy to use and requires no handwashing.
In summary, Magic Bullet blenders are dishwasher-safe, with cups, lids, and containers placed on the top rack of the dishwasher. The blender’s components, including the motor base, are made from durable materials and should be wiped down by hand.
📹 Magic Bullet Review – Answers to all your Magic Bullet questions
This video gives a complete overview of the Pro’s and Con’s of the Magic Bullet blender as well as answers to the most common …
📹 Nutribullet extractor blade maintenance and avoid synthetic grease
Maintain your extractor blade to extend its life and avoid buying a new one every 6 months as the manufacturer suggests.
Why not instead use Silicone grease? It’s not toxic (if manufacturer days so), will last long, blocks water, can resist high and low temperatures, will likely not leak away as easily as other grease. It can be used in washing machines for oil sealing rings at water pump in your dishwasher, or water taps (though with water pipe screws, i would prefer some layers of teflon tape). It’s even used in my old 13 year old electric shaver, hadn’t gone dried up yet (checked when disassembling to clean old hair and skin fat gunk)… Vegetable oils i imagine dry up faster, attract dust and depending on temperature may turn less oily, and over time when coconut (or whatever vegetable) oil reacts with oxygen, it would go bad.
Thank you for your explanations.. The nutribullet bearing rust easily as water will seep into the bearing. Oiling the blades is a good idea to extend the life of the base blade. Is there a way to stop the seapage of water into the bearing? Water causes the bearing to rust over time and eventually fail.
It seems those areas that you are lubricating specially the areas that comes in contact with liquid, lubrication will wash off in no time! Also the shaft of the blade should not need lubrication because the two bearings are responsible for smooth rotation of the shaft!! Of course cleaning the shaft and inspecting it for unusual wear is a good idea! if you see scratches or any kind of deep wear on metal shaft that should warn you about the bad condition of your bearings ( possibly rusted or ceased up bearings ). If you are good with this kind of work get yourself a pair of sealed stainless bearings and replace the original bearings.
Hey, Danh thanks for this article. I got a second-hand Nutribullet 600W blender for a friend and I am in the process of changing the 2 sealed bearings that sit in the blade shaft, as the ball bearings themselves were rusted along with the “sealed” housing the ball bearings were held in. It’s difficult to pop them out of the shaft, but this article helps alot: youtube.com/watch?v=Iw6VXRSHyNM I myself have a brand new Nutribullet 900W and after a couple weeks of using it, I noticed the blade got slightly loose, meaning it slides very slightly up and down inside the shaft. I tried tightening it (counterclockwise) so we’ll see over time if it gets more loose. I thought perhaps liquid will seep into the shaft where the bearings are held, causing them to rust over time. The cause of this might be because one time I packed the blender cup too full and had to screw the blade on the cup with a little bit of force. (This is not recommended in the instructions). This blender motor is powerful and any overloading of ingredients in the cup may cause the blade to loosen, in my opinion. What do you think? I never thought of using food grade lubricant like coconut oil or shay butter. Thanks for that tip!
Thank you Danh Ngo. I noticed that mechanical oil has also been leaking into the blend…. this is very concerning to me because who knows how long I’ve been ingesting this. I did one last test with clear filtered water and it was indeed leaking into the blend. I will watch the rest of your article to learn more, but I have also order a new blade attachment off of Amazon.
There is a very thin washer and also another seeming mini nut/washer about 1/2″ down the nut preventing me from pushing the mechanism down and apart from the grey plastic housing (I didn’t see this in your demonstration). I have no idea how to take this ‘washer’ thing off since it’s so thin and seemingly stuck to the nut. Any ideas?
You never said ball bearings but that’s what I think I saw and I think that’s what you meant… Only a cheap blender would use them and it’s not even safe. Those bearings will wear and at high speed there just going to explode one day. They should be bushings not ball bearings. I have a blender from the 60s really really good one and it’s been maintenance free since. I think maybe you can still buy a good blender and that would be my recommendation. And then just never worry about it