Black & Decker CBM205 Coffee Bean Mill, Stainless Steel

22
Jul/09
13

Black & Decker CBM205 Coffee Bean Mill, Stainless Steel

Savor the taste of a freshly ground bean brew from this precise milling system that crushes coffee beans within seconds. No more guesswork! Dial adjusts so you can set the texture exactly the way you want – from very fine Turkish blend to coarse percolator grind. Dual safety mechanism ensures that the unit will not operate unless the top cover is closed and the ground coffee receptacle is in place.


Buy Black & Decker CBM205 Coffee Bean Mill, Stainless Steel at Amazon

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Comments (13) Trackbacks (0)
  1. Yue yan
    11:41 pm on July 22nd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Save your money to buy a good manual coffee mill
    The Black and Decker CBM 205 burr coffee mill looks nice, feels nice, but is not nice. Don’t buy one.

  2. Curt
    12:02 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Worthless. Avoid at all costs.
    Grinds are so coarse you could do better with a knife and cutting board. Fine grains shown on box are impossible to reproduce at home with this unit.

  3. Ringo
    1:58 am on July 23rd, 2009

    4.0 out of 5 stars
    pretty good for the price
    The bad reviews for this product are laughable. For under $30, what do you expect? I’ve had this grinder for 9 months and it works just fine.

  4. Gunnar
    2:05 am on July 23rd, 2009

    The only good thing I can say about this Black & Decker coffee grinder is the sense of morbid delight one can relish upon learning that all its many flaws are shared by others and exposed here in the Amazon customer reviews. But unless that is what you’re buying a coffee grinder for — in which case you’ve had WAY TOO MUCH coffee (or perhaps too little) — it’s really not worth it.

    Let’s review the problems with this product:

    * On button must be held down. Moreover, the button is on the side, so unless you’re trying to grind coffee while simultaneously thrusting the grinder off the counter, you’ll have to hold onto it with your other hand. If you’ve got large enough hands, you may be able to hold the button down with your thumb while gripping the unit with your palm and fingers, earning a sense of accomplishment which I’m afraid to say is all too little consolation.

    * Grinder gets clogged. Every couple weeks I have to take the thing apart and clear out all the coffee grit and dust. If this were the derailleur on my mountain bike, I wouldn’t mind; I expect bike parts to get gritty often and need overhauling, plus there’s a whole Zen thing going on there which just doesn’t carry over to the desperate-for-coffee morning scene where the above scenario plays out.

    * Grounds receptacle builds up static charge. This is an amazing thing. I had no idea coffee beans could so convincingly mimic the properties of magnetized iron filaments, as they cling together in a lump on the wall of the plastic container. I am forever scraping them off into the coffee filter. Sometimes they take to flight, perhaps attracted by the magnetic force of the International Space Station, only to settle scatter-shot all over the counter.

    * Doesn’t grind fine enough for espresso, or course enough for French press. The heavy grind itself isn’t so very bad, but it’s undercut the the fine powder of grounds that this machine invariably produces, and which causes so much trouble to the machinery and makes such a mess. Yet it doesn’t grind quite fine enough for espresso, unless you’re inclined to meticulously harvest all the aforementioned “fine powder” produced over the course of several days of grinding regular coffee.

    * After a few months, works only intermittently. I’ve had this thing for several months, and just this past week it decided to quit working from time to time. The thing is a real stickler about having the receptacle seated just right and the lid closed. To get it to run, I have to scrape all the detritus off the base and click it in and out of position a few times, until finally it will chew up some beans for me.

    With all these problems, you might ask why I’m still using this thing. I ask myself the same question every morning. Fact is, once I’ve got my coffee in hand, I forget all about it and carry on with my day. In fact, I’ve been meaning to write this review for months. For some reason I happened to think about it today while visiting Amazon for something else.

    One of these days, I will remember to look for another coffee grinder when I’m at the store. It may take months, but when that happens, with God as my witness, I promise you the sledgehammer is coming out.

    Please spare yourself all this anguish. It really is a very poorly designed machine — so poorly designed, in fact, that I’ve sworn off ever buying anything by Black & Decker again. If they can screw up something as simple as a coffee grinder this badly, they can’t be trusted to do anything right.

  5. Anonymous
    2:37 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Noisy & Hard to use
    Come on Black & Decker, you can do better than this!? For as much noise that this thing makes, I’m surprised that the police haven’t been at my door for disturbing the peace…

  6. Edie
    3:12 am on July 23rd, 2009

    I just bought this machine at Target and liked pretty much everything about it for an inexpensive piece…. easy to rinse container, easy to put beans in for grinding, and it grinds pretty quickly. The cons for it is that you have to hold down the button until it finishes grinding (not a big deal). It produces quite a bit of powder which is creating a bitter coffee. I am actually taking mine back as I do not enjoy bitter coffee. You can adjust the courseness of the bean grinding, but the very course seemed pretty fine to me with quite a bit of powder around the sides of the container that catches the grounds.

  7. Oratilwe
    4:49 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    I give it a zero stars/ one star is too generous.
    Life is too short to own a gadget that causes so much aggravation (especially when you’re uncaffeinated) and have to work so hard to make the beans grind properly…

  8. Bin
    5:05 am on July 23rd, 2009

    I really wanted this model to work. $24.95 at Target. Cheapest price for a burr grinder around. However, after 3 (!) that were all DOA’s AND NEVER WORKED AT ALL, brand new out of the box, I gave up. Maybe this Target had a bad batch, but after three refunds I can’t help but give it the lowest rating.

  9. Muskan
    7:44 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    design is flawed
    This mill is seriously flawed because it jams up from all the dust it makes. After a month or so it clogged with coffee dust and the motor seized.

  10. Bayarmaa
    7:57 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Irritating Machine
    Looks okay. No real problems with Grinding (maybe there are betters out there? I never thought about it). I CAN’T STAND THE GRINDING BUTTON!

  11. Jovan
    9:02 am on July 23rd, 2009

    2.0 out of 5 stars
    Coarse setting is too fine
    This grinder works OK, but not great. You have to hold the button down, and even at its coarsest setting it still grinds finer than I’d like for drip coffee.

  12. Wallis
    9:31 am on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Might be from the makers of Italian cars
    Although it’s just a B&D product, this mill looks like they used pininfarina for the aesthetics. However, like many fine examples of Italian engineering this mill looks great and…

  13. Fritz
    12:31 pm on July 23rd, 2009

    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Inconsistent
    I was surprised to see reviews stating that the grind is too fine. With the one I received, the grind is very coarse even on the finest setting.

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