These stylish sensor bins are great for those situations where you need both hands-free such as scraping waste ingredients off your chopping board or leftovers from your plate etc. A natural evolution of the foot operated bins of the past, these units use infrared technology to sense your proximity, activating the motorized lid for your convenience.
Powered by 'D' cell batteries, you can also activate the lid via 'Open' and 'Close' buttons as well as turn the unit off entirely at the back if required. Please note that batteries are not included in the package.
The bin itself is steel, whilst the lid assembly has a lightweight plastic design with a mirror effect chrome-plated coating to suit modern kitchens. Also included is a circular bin bag clip if required.
Top comments
Chanchi32
23 Jan 164#10
Not a bad/rubbish deal
Heat added
I'll show myself out
dianneNE
23 Jan 163#23
I had one of these but my greyhound found out how to use it - he thought it was an eat all you can buffet :confused:
oliverreed
23 Jan 163#2
D batteries? Does it follow you around the kitchen as well?
Latest comments (30)
HereKittyKitty
25 Jan 16#30
Good for disabled folks!
cmpaterson
24 Jan 16#29
Avoid. Great to start with but played up after a few months and now have to open manually as lid refuses to lift despite new batteries and LED indicator still flashing away. Even when it did work the lid would shut too quickly which was a pain when scraping a plate into bin. Many negative reviews on Amazon suggest similar problems or broken hinges.
shareef
24 Jan 16#28
Really surprised by lack of love for these bins. I have the Costco one and love it ( as much as you can love a bin)
Jay20VT
24 Jan 16#27
load of rubbish lmfao
wpj
24 Jan 16#26
Prices have all gone up anyway- 58l, £39, 42l £33.
enclavemarine
24 Jan 16#25
Don't buy. complete gimmick. I had one and when the novelty wore off it just returned to being a regular load of rubbish
bellboys
24 Jan 16#24
Got the Dihl version of this idea from Amazon for £36-ish over 5 months ago. Got it from Amazon because liked the idea but had a feeling it could be unreliable so knew they wouldn't be a ball ache if it stopped working. It's been 100% reliable so far and we've found it genuinely useful (and, yes, I agree, I do like showing visitors what it does :man: ). Really would,'t be without it now (and it takes 4x AA rechargeables so neglibile running costs). Plus it wasn't really any more expensive than a decemt quality 'ordinary' one.
dianneNE
23 Jan 163#23
I had one of these but my greyhound found out how to use it - he thought it was an eat all you can buffet :confused:
Besford
23 Jan 161#22
"... A natural evolution of the foot operated bins of the past..."
Err, no. They work very well and keep going without batteries, whereas these......................
An unreliable 'solution' to a problem which doesn't exist.
muradxs
23 Jan 16#21
Very similar to the eBuyer bins on here 2 weeks ago, almost the same design, identical price. Wish I hadn't bothered with those - as someone else said already - it was a gimmick for a day or two, then we got bored with it. Now back to a Brabantia foot pedal bin.
noahsdad
23 Jan 161#20
Bit of a pointless gimmick item IMHO. Only fit for purpose if installed around kitchen worktop close to where your chopping and cooking etc. And who wants food waste lying around there?
Happy with my current system, plastic plate on work top to stick all peelings, skins etc on. Then later slip it into bin. Could you a paper plate or bowl or whatever, and its way cheaper and more practical again IMHO.
arjun311
23 Jan 16#19
I had similar ones, wasn't very good.
kneale81
23 Jan 161#18
Load of trash.
bossyboots
23 Jan 16#17
Clearly you are a very odd creature :confused:
crazyal
23 Jan 161#16
The bin at Costco is 80L capacity.
A2EEM
23 Jan 16#15
Costco has this a rectangular bin near enough identical to the OP photo for £40 Inc VAT and takes 6 AAA batteries.
oliverreed
23 Jan 161#14
Clearly you must be a 'Stationary Champion' battery boy
Sephiroth
23 Jan 162#12
We have these at work. They are rubbish when the batteries run out.
bossyboots to Sephiroth
23 Jan 161#13
That made me laugh!!! Either you are having a joke or being very lazy!
machman1209
23 Jan 161#11
What's wrong with using your knee to lift the lid? Costs nowt. Solutions for problems that don't exist.
Chanchi32
23 Jan 164#10
Not a bad/rubbish deal
Heat added
I'll show myself out
highlander1965
23 Jan 161#9
just had a look thx for that buzz I have ordered 58l one in silver
lucyferror
23 Jan 161#8
Thx :smiley:
highlander1965
23 Jan 16#3
cant get deal any help here ??
BuzzDuraband to highlander1965
23 Jan 16#7
Sorted :smiley: apologies for that.
pancho00
23 Jan 16#6
Is anyone else experiencing problems with the get deal banner disappearing since the update?
lucyferror
23 Jan 16#5
Item removed
chrisnasah
23 Jan 16#4
Link not working
oliverreed
23 Jan 163#2
D batteries? Does it follow you around the kitchen as well?
Opening post
Powered by 'D' cell batteries, you can also activate the lid via 'Open' and 'Close' buttons as well as turn the unit off entirely at the back if required. Please note that batteries are not included in the package.
The bin itself is steel, whilst the lid assembly has a lightweight plastic design with a mirror effect chrome-plated coating to suit modern kitchens. Also included is a circular bin bag clip if required.
Top comments
Heat added
I'll show myself out
Latest comments (30)
Err, no. They work very well and keep going without batteries, whereas these......................
An unreliable 'solution' to a problem which doesn't exist.
Happy with my current system, plastic plate on work top to stick all peelings, skins etc on. Then later slip it into bin. Could you a paper plate or bowl or whatever, and its way cheaper and more practical again IMHO.
Heat added
I'll show myself out
Sorted :smiley: apologies for that.