Had our Breville toaster must be at least ten years and it has always produced evenly toasted bread and crumpets too. Slots are reasonably wide which is good, because we don’t buy shop bread but bake our own and never cut thin slices. Over the years, the numbers have worn off the dials and I did try and get replacements, but as they stopped the particuar model we have years ago, they are no longer available. Not a problem though, as years of use and I know how far to turn the dials according to what doneness I want.

Fresh out of the oven five minutes ago…Ahhhh!

Just to finish this story. It was a right carry on speaking to Bosch. Their automated phone system does not offer tou a choice that matched my needs. Eventually someone spoke to me (and they were very helpful) and emailed the right department. They eventually rang, apologised and offered me a refund once they have received back the erroneous toaster.

Meanwhile, I am so impressed with making toast under the grill on the oven, that is what I am going to continue doing!

    A Dualit classic is wonderfully simple DFK and every part is replaceable with available spares. Our 3-slot with rack for toasted sandwich gets frequent use here, it’s 3 or 4 years old now and I’m glad I finally bought one. Chatting with DC when I got it the slots sound wider than the ones that don’t take the wire rack but I still like this variation.

    Oh, and you haven’t lived until you turn the timer only to find out you didn’t switch it on at the mains, lol! It’s manual of course, no pop up so you keep your eye on it but no fancy electronics or pop-up switch to complicate it.

    25 days later

    Our toaster went last night, ironic lol

    So now need a new one.

    Decent De1pro v1.45 - Niche Duo - Niche Zero - Decent is the best machine ever made -

      Cuprajake Well, I decided not to go down the Duallit route. Mainly because like all things, a lot of the new versions seem to get pretty average reviews when it comes to making toast. I sat and thought about it and realised that every toaster I had, the toast itself was poor. So, I decided to buy this which has a 3 year manufacturers warranty, and co-incidentally, so far the toast seems to be even on both sides. I bought it at Sainsburys for £30 and am delighted

      https://www.sainsburys.co.uk/gol-ui/product/russell-hobbs-26061-honeycomb-2-slice-toaster-black

        We have a Magimix. It’s about ten years old and it’s a pain in the neck. The operating lever falls off and needs replacing at regular intervals. Only reason we keep it is that it does have a one slice setting, halving the energy consumption…

        dfk41 Well, I decided not to go down the Duallit route. Mainly because like all things, a lot of the new versions seem to get pretty average reviews when it comes to making toast.

        This is because they do two variant lines of toasters. The classics like mine and the cheaper ones with ordinary heating elements like in most other toaster and about a 3rd of the wire density for heating.

        The cheap range of Dualits are no better than other cheap toasters.

          You could get a Sunbeam Radiant Control Toaster. Toast toast automatically.

          I had no idea there were two quality standards for Dualit toasters which perhaps explains why mine is pretty poor, always thought it was a bit short on elements. The best toaster I ever had was an Argos basics which cost about 7 quid and toasted perfectly. In my almost 50 years of toaster ownership I’ve found it’s pot luck whether you get a toaster that toasts evenly or is patchy.