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Correct me if I'm wrong Kelly

...but I thought this model was designed in Australia. They were certainly built here for years and versions of it are still available though now engineered here and built in china.

As to how powerful, from what I understand they are comparable or more powerful than a classic MX series with the added bonus that the mixer head locks down so it won't climb in heavy mixtures as a beatermix might.
 
Sunbeam Euromixer

I have one and they are certainly not that rare.  Since I have so many mixers they don't get used that often however I found when I was using this one I really liked it.. it's smooth and it's quiet. I never did any dough in it though. They show up quite frequently at thrift stores but in many cases the plastic  has yellowed.  
 
We have this model as our one and only mixer, and we really like it.  The one we have is at least 15 years old.  My wife bought it before we were married.  The only drawback with this model is that it has no port on the top for any attachments such as a shredder, juicer etc.  We have never used it for dough of any type so I can't speak to its power in that respect, but for other types of work it has never disappointed us.  The low profile of this mixer works well for us because our counter space is limited, and it fits nicely in the storage compartment of our microwave cart.

[this post was last edited: 7/17/2012-09:56]
 
Here, Here

Chris is correct, the mixer was an Australian design and spawned the power plant in all future Sunbeam Mixmasters.  They are extremely quiet and very powerful.  Unlike most governor controlled mixers this one will increase in speed regardless of the load.  It gets pretty wild when you have a bowl of cookie dough and crank it up to speed 6.  Its one of those critical thinking excercises when you ask yourself, "should I use both hands to hold the bowl, let loose and try to turn down the speed or just grab for the plug."  The mixer makes great bread and it doesn't seem to be any problem for the motor to spin through the tackiest of batters.  The same motor was used in the Classic rerelease for the anniversary model and is still used in the 4 quart models on the market today.  They are non repairable, have a two year over the counter warrantee and have oneweakness,  a fuseable link that burns through if the mixer is overtaxed for a long period of mixing.  I have never understood why the fuse is there to save the motor if its not made to be repaired.  I bought one new to see how it worked and then gave it my sister who is still using it as her daily driver.  A slightly larger wattage version of the same motor is used in the Sunbeam Heritage series which are also quiet but seem to have lots of issues with the motorized bowl drive.
 
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