The Shardor OK7510 is a capable budget chopper that steps up from the smallest mini class with a 32 oz bowl and 400 watts. At $41.79 and a 4.4-star average across 224 reviews, it has built a quiet following among home cooks who want slightly more volume than a 3-cup model without spending more than $50.
Home cooks who need a compact but functional food processor for everyday chopping, slicing soft vegetables, making sauces, or prepping small-to-medium batches without the bulk of a full-size machine.
Skip if
You are processing large family-size batches regularly, need to handle very hard ingredients like raw root vegetables frequently, or prefer a name-brand product with an established support network.
Power 400 W
Jar / bowl capacity 32.0 oz
Speeds 2
Jar / bowl material Plastic
Blade material Stainless Steel
Color Black
Priced 83% below the category median ($250.57 across 47 tracked models)
Power of 400 W - lower than 65% of the 49 models we track
Jar / bowl capacity of 32.0 oz - smaller than 67% of the 49 models we track
Pros
400W motor handles a wider range of tasks than a typical 250W mini chopper
32 oz bowl is practical for medium prep batches
Stainless steel blade holds an edge well according to buyer feedback
Compact 6 x 6 x 6 in footprint suits small kitchens
Strong value at $41.79 with a 4.4-star rating
Cons
Plastic bowl may stain and absorb odors over time
Only 224 reviews means the long-term durability picture is still developing
No listed pulse function, limiting fine texture control
Our scorecard
4.3/5overall
Owner rating4.4/5
4.4 average across 224 owner ratings
Popularity3.1/5
224 owner reviews, more than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other countertop and personal blenders, immersion blenders, food processors, and masticating, centrifugal and citrus juicers we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Specifications
Power
400 W
Jar / bowl capacity
32.0 oz
Speeds
2
Jar / bowl material
Plastic
Blade material
Stainless Steel
Color
Black
Dimensions
6 X 6 X 5.99 In
Voltage
120 Volts
Overview
The Shardor OK7510 packs a 400W motor into a compact 6 x 6 x 6 in body and delivers a 32 oz working bowl, enough to handle a medium onion, a batch of hummus, or a cup of salsa without multiple passes. Two speed settings keep operation straightforward, and the stainless steel blade is the component most reviewers single out for staying sharp.
For $41.79 the value proposition is hard to argue with. The plastic bowl is standard for the price point, and the 120V power draw means it plugs into any American outlet. The footprint is compact enough to live on a countertop without dominating it, and the 32 oz capacity hits a practical sweet spot between a 3-cup mini chopper and a full 7-cup processor.
The trade-off is build quality at the premium margins: the plastic housing will not match the feel of a Cuisinart or Breville, and at 400W you will need patience with harder prep tasks. Within those limits, the OK7510 performs consistently and the reviewer base, while still growing at 224 reviews, skews positive.
Performance notes
At 400W the OK7510 handles herbs, onions, garlic, soft cheeses, canned chickpeas for hummus, and medium-density vegetables like zucchini or cooked sweet potato comfortably. Raw carrots in large pieces or dense whole nuts will require smaller loads and patience. The two-speed setup covers most daily chopping without complication. The stainless blade is the standout spec: buyers note it produces cleaner cuts than the blades found on competing sub-$50 models.
What buyers say
Reviewers appreciate the straightforward two-speed design and consistently praise blade sharpness. A handful of buyers note that the plastic bowl develops light scratches over several months of regular use, which is typical for the category. Overall sentiment is positive, with most complaints pointing to capacity limits rather than performance defects.
Is the Shardor OK7510 bowl and blade dishwasher safe?
Shardor lists the bowl and blade as dishwasher safe. Place the bowl on the top rack to prevent warping from high heat over repeated wash cycles.
Can it chop raw meat?
The 400W motor can handle boneless raw meat in small portions for things like burger mix or meatballs. Keep pieces small and process in short bursts to avoid overloading the motor.
How does the 32 oz bowl compare to a cup measurement?
32 fluid ounces equals 4 cups. That is enough for a single batch of dip, a medium sauce, or one onion and several garlic cloves together without crowding.
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