Without reading the article on grind speed and output temperature, I would expect your result for several reasons: 1. Lower speeds get the grounds through the motor more quickly, meaning less heat transfer from the motor or burrs themselves (lower contact time) and less heat from the energy released by the breakdown of the beans (because fewer such shatterings/crushings are likely to occur as each bean passes through the burrs in less time). 2. Higher RPM leads to more fines, which have to have been broken more times and/or more energetically. If you performed this test after adjusting the grind settings to have identical brew time, then this might not have been as substantial a factor, but the video just says "mid-grind" and you've also said that the profiles of the resulting coffee followed the same "common wisdom" of the clarity/sweetness outcomes as with finer or coarser grind size. 3. Higher RPM means more energy in the moving burr because it's moving faster, thus collisions involving it will have more energetic debris. In this case, that debris is coffee in the process of being ground and it has nowhere to go but further into the maelstrom, and so the grounds will have endured several such collisions and carry the energy (and at 7x speed that's 49x as much energy) of those collisions with them in the form of higher exit velocity (which you'd already remarked upon) and temperature. Some fraction of that excess exit velocity would also translate into heat, but some of that heat would be lost to the air if those grounds bounced and it's unlikely to compare to the energy gained from the many collisions the coffee experienced between the burrs.
An interesting possibility is if RPM can expand the versatility of a burr enough to eliminate the need for multiple grinders, e.g., What’s the difference between Multi-Purpose at 1400 RPM vs. High Uniformity at 200 RPM?
That is an interesting thought. I definitely want to pick up the other burr sets and do some testing in the future and would be curious to look at that as a topic.
Thank you this video. A topic that I have not seen much on YT. I have been social isolation for health and covid reasons and so not need a new grinder to make that even worst ;-) Keep up the good work, always appreciated !
Haha I feel you Alan, as someone who is considered medium to high risk for Covid I’ve been in extreme social isolation for a good while, with measured risks of course. But thank you for watching and the kind words!
There is this thing called voltage regulator that can give you the RPM control for any of your grinder, it's inexpensive as well, flat burr grinder seems to get better results at 800 rpm and why not try it?
I am wondering about RDT and clumping. I use a ROK Grinder and find it does benefit from RDT to minimize retention. BUT, the process does seem to increase clumping compared to no RDT. Even using one spiritual will have a small, but noticeable increase in clumps compared to no spritz. Has this been tested?
That’s an interesting topic. I haven’t seen or noticed much issue with RDT beyond less static retention. It may be something worth looking into though.
Waiting on the Acaia orbit which should be shipping with RPM adjustments. I don't think it'll preform much different than the P64 though. This month, it's Bunzilla month.
I haven’t followed the Acaia Orbit all that closely, but considering their connection with Weber I would be a little wearing of the rpm adjustments working as advertised as the Key was a jamming mess and when I asked why they essentially said grind faster.
@@Sprometheus We'll see. I'm okay being a test subject on this purchase as I primarily want access to the grind by weight feature to allow my wife for easier access to espresso making, and I appreciate the aesthetics design. The orbit will be using a 250w DC brushless while the P64 uses a 300w DC brushless.
A year later how are you feeling about these results? Anything you’d add? I’m getting a df83v which has a variable speed control and I’m trying to learn about how I can use the different speeds. I brew medium roast espresso generally drank as americanos. Thoughts?
I literally came to this video because I'm in the same boat as you, tryna figure out the varied RPM with the new DF83V. I still haven't ordered mine yet, but I'm close.
So? All these months later did any of you find something to go on? All i can say after extensive testing with my df83v is that the lower end of rpm, I don't even know why you would want that because i have not yet produced anything that comes close to justifying it's use. Whatever bean I'm brewing whether it being for espresso or pour over, it just pales in comparison to what I'm achieving in sweetness and overall flavours at the higher RPM's. Even for pour over if you think about lowering RPM because of less fines, don't. Your sacrificing all the juicy flavours for said less fines and I don't even think it matters anything as I'm not even sure it produces less fines on the lower rpm spectrum. What i definitely know for sure is that if you want less fines just slow feed your beans into the hopper which has a huge noticable impact. So for now I'd say its a load of crap to waste effort with lowering RPM as far as my findings go
Lagom recommends speed number 3 on the p100 for everything from espresso to filter. I think that's around 580 RPM? Not sure what their recommendation speeds are on the p64. Interesting tests! Thanks for the all the data.
I’ve never seen a specific recommended point, but 4 on the grinder is approximately 800 rpm if you look at it like 1 is 200 and 9 is 1400. I have heard some rumblings that 4 is the ideal based on user experience, and that does seem to check out in my experience. Thanks for watching and the comment!
@@Sprometheus According to Lagom P64 user manual, setting 4 is 650rpm +/-5%. Also, the quick guide recommend speed 4 for espresso using HU burr. For MP it's 7 for espresso and 3 for brew. Anyway, great video and very informative.
@@Killand8 For espresso, I thought the lower RPM range shots (like at 4 on the P64 which is 650rpm) with the MP unimodal burrs didn't pull as well, I'd get channeling and generally worse results, higher RPM (setting 7 on p64, which is I think 1100RPM) worked better with that burr for me while still having amazing flavour clarity, my theory is there wasn't enough fines and it was 'too unimodal' somehow to work for espresso but it might have just been me and my machine and coffees.
Amazing breakdown. I've heard several people talk about the preference of a hand grinder when it comes to conical burrs stating the lower RPM reduces the amount of fines. That would seem to hold up with your findings.
Thanks Macehead! And yeah, considering conicals need far less speed to grind than flats they often are below 500RPM with a motor, and I’m not sure what your average person grinds on with their hands but it’s likely the slower speed does create less fines. That said, conicals in nature create more fines in general, so less is always in relation to flats.
@@Sprometheus Based on a few timings and revolution counts posted on coffee forums (including my own!) people grind on a direct manual grinder at 50-70 rpm
Super interesting. Would love to see similar experiments with a hand grinder. Obviously the range of speeds you can get with a hand grinder would be much smaller but I'd be curious if there's much of a difference. I imagine consistency makes a difference there as well (I.e. do you speed up or slow down throughout the grind). Would be difficult to measure your speeds though.
Yeah for sure, when I was first considering this video before I got the P64 I considered using my Niche and a hand grinder to do it, but found it difficult to get consistency or being all that accurate on RPM.
Great video, I think grinder speed is interesting but adding the extra parameter to an espresso workflow just doesn't seem worth it. Ideally coffee grinder companies would offer RPM settings that either promote clarity, body, or a middle ground like the SSP high uniformity and multipurpose. But logistially I think I would prefer getting SSP high uniformity over a slower grind just because I'm impatient and feel like it would be a "better" upgrade for that type of brew.
Hey man, as always a very cool and interesting vidéo ! I have a recommandation for a vidéo, if you find this interesting, I would very much like to see a vidéo on the C40 but with measurments, datas, différents types of filters, expresso, etc... A late breakedown of the commandante c40 we can say. I have one my self and would find that very interesting to see how someone with your experience could analyse (compare?) the C40 and explain how to get the most out of it ! Thanks for reading ! Love your vids anyway, Peace Nil
Any differences you noticed with the roast level--light versus medium versus dark--related to RPM speed? Do certain roasts work better with certain RPM?
For espresso at least, I think I generally prefer Higher RPM for darker coffees or ones that I dont love the flavour of (you don't want high flavour clarity) and want to add milk to it, for lighter roasts where I want more flavour clarity ill do lower RPM.
It shouldn’t be counter intuitive that higher rpm increases heat - kinetic energy is proportional to velocity squared where as time is just a linear proportion
Well that was the common assumption, but the Barista Hustle grinding RPM article showed slower making more heat and asserted it was time based. So in my mind constant mild friction lasting for a minute would translate to more heat than a short burst. But I would say this goes to show that there are plenty of sources giving conflicting info, or even just repeating what they’ve heard so that’s why I like to test these things out on my own.
Definitely not surprising. Look at any other cutting, drilling, or machining operation. Using a blade, bit, or burr faster always causes it to heat up more.
Thank you for experimenting and putting up some numbers. I wonder if your results would differ with a conical grinder. I chase body in my espresso, so I'm now wondering about how fast I can crank my hand grinder without hurting myself lol. Might be time for a drill :)
Great vid as always! Would be interested to see how this changes by roast level. Perhaps, even a comparison between a dark, medium, and light roasts by low, medium, and high rpm, but that’s starting to get into crazy ANOVA territory lol
Thank you my friend! These kinds of videos are always a big undertaking and not often popular, but the real nerds appreciate it haha. I absolutely am curious about roast level. I feel like darker roasts would create more fines due to being more brittle, and then medium a little less, and lighter the least. So you can infer from that how fines effect extraction time and yield, as well as flavor. It would be my guess the results would be similar. But maybe someday I’ll get a wild hair and try it out myself to be sure.
Did you get a chance to play with the RPMs with the Weber Key when you had it? Strangely some say the shot timing gets SLOWER (longer shots) with LOWER RPM which sounds like it has more fines at lower RPM (but by taste, it doesn't, since it still has higher clarity / cleaner results at lower RPM and maybe more body at higher RPM).
I'm just a casual coffee consumer. Since grinder quality is rated primarily on coffee granularity and consistency the output on varying speed should likewise be priority. What would be interesting is measuring the heat generated on the burr and grounds and if the variation on heat if any has any effect on taste.
great video. Who'd a thunk an adjustable speed grinder is even a thing? Interesting results though. Seems you could extrapolate your findings to hand grinders which will likely in the 200 rpm range (or less), suggesting that hand grinders are a good thing for espresso and maybe a good thing for pour over if you like a bright cup.
Thank you! And yeah I’d say that would be a fair thing to glean in general. But also take into account that all hand grinders use conicals which create more fines by nature of their design.
Try making a video on all the different burrs. I wonder if they make a ceramic burr. I have a ceramic 54mm and steel for my baratza vario-w. The ceramic has completely different teeth patterns. Someone said “Less teeth maybe more crushing then cutting” so I switched my steel burr back to ceramic to get a more balanced cup vs bright/high clarity cup from the steel burrs. Currently using a ECM classika single boiler with PID and flow control and it’s been a lot of fun! Would love to try a p64 but for now the vario-w with flat 54 will have to do!
Spro I'm wondering what the rpm would be using a conical burr grinder to achieve the equivalent result to your 800 rpm for the most balanced espresso using flat burrs?
using my hand grinder, I will have to try grinding faster... lol (seriously, I have been contemplating connecting a hand drill to see what difference it makes in the cup)
Wait, are you saying you changed the grind size for the espresso to reach the same contact time and yield? This test doesn't seem useful without knowing how you had to adjust the grind size based on speed. Is it possible the difference in extraction and flavor just comes down to the fact the you adjusted the grind size?
Upcoming article from Jonathan Gagné's blog suggests that the trend "more speed gives more fines" depends on burr geometry: some burrs will behave in the contrary way while some others will not show significant difference.
thanks for ur honesty in thinking basically no significant difference between high, medium or low grind speeds. if i were to come to this conclusion on some reviewer channels i'd be belittled and condescended upon despite making espresso since before some of the reviewers were born. not to mention getting attacked for expressing an opinion despite nearly 40 years espresso experience, brewing, roasting, rebuilding machines.
Liked the video. I won’t lie, I’ve repeatedly seen written that “slower RPM means more heat” and I just don’t get it. Inevitably, the same kit grinding slower will take longer to complete grinding, so the energy to grind the beans will generated over a longer period of time, reducing the temperature increase. Your observation of fast speeds being hot and grinding slowly implies there’s a lot of stuff going on in there generating heat that isn’t actually contributing to the coffee getting ground. Whether this is the grinder itself generating excess heat or potentially the coffee itself pinballing around the chamber and not getting into the burrs.
I think the premise here is its valuable to talk about grind distribution, not grind size. The grind distribution at lower RPM is more uniform, having less fines. The grind distribution at higher RPM is less uniform, having more fines. So I’m not sure “at same grind size” is a useful concept. Unless I’ve overthought your question and all you’re asking about is differences in brew time given the same “grinder setting / burr separation”.
Pick prep being equal, more fines always means slower brew, no matter the method, right? (Assuming same puck prep ensures fines are equally distributed and channeling does not occur.)
So a little background on why I went the dialed in route Vs just changing the grind. Lower RPMs with less fines resulted in 7-10 second difference in shot time, with also was very inconsistent on taste and extraction, so it didn’t feel like valuable information on the topic. Aligning brew time per speed adjustment allowed for some consistency which allowed me to glean actual data from beyond slow grind = fast shot and Vice versa.
More questions on conical burr. The result is opposite if we grind with conical burr. The shot is faster at higher rpm, and slower at lower rpm. How do you think about that?
Very interesting experiment. Thanks for doing it. Here's a question: what happens to your experiment if you pull espresso with a paper filter at the bottom?
I actually wondered the same question about grinder rpm. Not to long ago, me and my friend tested this idea out with our grinders. We found that like you, the lower rpm had just slightly more mojo to it. Better crispiness, sweetness, and even aroma, higher rpm made the coffee have a different smell from the lower rpm one.
Really thankful for this video. I've been wanting for someone to make a video on this for a long while, really happy to see you making one! Now I hope others make videos on this topic, too, so we can get more opinions. :)
Without a motor / drill you're not going to be able to change your RPM enough to really make a difference, I'd suggest to try keeping your grinder LEVEL and grind at a steady pace.
You had to grind finer for espresso at 1400 rpm compared to 200rpm? higher speed= more friction= more heat, adding heat to beans means you have to grind finer (see the microwave heated beans experiment before grinding).
I haven't read the BaristaHustle piece, but the temperature differences make sense; the burrs producing more heat and friction for the longer grind time required by a finer setting. Very impressive and timely video for the coffee community at large. I really look forward to the times when I have to rewind in order to really wrap my head around the technicality of it. (Don't worry, it all congealed by the end).
I have a Eureko Mignon (flat, 1400rpm) and Weber Key (conical, 30-150rpm). My 1:2 espresso has muted bitterness but more body from the Eureka, while the Key always give sweeter but less body shots
A lot of that is due to the burr design as well, although people may be surprised since they think flat burrs generally are higher clarity than connical burrs, but the KEYs burrs are pretty high clarity and low body, most Eureka burrs aren't too high clarity but pretty traditional / balanced.
Great video! I think it would be interesting doing this but reversed: try to get the same-ish cup with different RPM but adjusting the grind and/or quantity of coffe, to see how that affects other factors, like retention and grinding time, among other thing that I might be missing out. It could also be useful in order to get a general idea of the coffee profile that a grinder has based on its specs.
Without reading the article on grind speed and output temperature, I would expect your result for several reasons:
1. Lower speeds get the grounds through the motor more quickly, meaning less heat transfer from the motor or burrs themselves (lower contact time) and less heat from the energy released by the breakdown of the beans (because fewer such shatterings/crushings are likely to occur as each bean passes through the burrs in less time).
2. Higher RPM leads to more fines, which have to have been broken more times and/or more energetically. If you performed this test after adjusting the grind settings to have identical brew time, then this might not have been as substantial a factor, but the video just says "mid-grind" and you've also said that the profiles of the resulting coffee followed the same "common wisdom" of the clarity/sweetness outcomes as with finer or coarser grind size.
3. Higher RPM means more energy in the moving burr because it's moving faster, thus collisions involving it will have more energetic debris. In this case, that debris is coffee in the process of being ground and it has nowhere to go but further into the maelstrom, and so the grounds will have endured several such collisions and carry the energy (and at 7x speed that's 49x as much energy) of those collisions with them in the form of higher exit velocity (which you'd already remarked upon) and temperature. Some fraction of that excess exit velocity would also translate into heat, but some of that heat would be lost to the air if those grounds bounced and it's unlikely to compare to the energy gained from the many collisions the coffee experienced between the burrs.
An interesting possibility is if RPM can expand the versatility of a burr enough to eliminate the need for multiple grinders, e.g., What’s the difference between Multi-Purpose at 1400 RPM vs. High Uniformity at 200 RPM?
That is an interesting thought. I definitely want to pick up the other burr sets and do some testing in the future and would be curious to look at that as a topic.
Thank you this video. A topic that I have not seen much on YT. I have been social isolation for health and covid reasons and so not need a new grinder to make that even worst ;-) Keep up the good work, always appreciated !
Haha I feel you Alan, as someone who is considered medium to high risk for Covid I’ve been in extreme social isolation for a good while, with measured risks of course. But thank you for watching and the kind words!
No many baristas do experiment on the rpm speed of the motor of the coffee grinder, this is interesting find.
Another excellent video.
Thanks, as always, my friend.
There is this thing called voltage regulator that can give you the RPM control for any of your grinder, it's inexpensive as well, flat burr grinder seems to get better results at 800 rpm and why not try it?
Maybe this is just me but I would use variable speed to recreate the taste of hand griding. Hand grinding is about 120rpm with is close enough to 200.
I am wondering about RDT and clumping. I use a ROK Grinder and find it does benefit from RDT to minimize retention. BUT, the process does seem to increase clumping compared to no RDT. Even using one spiritual will have a small, but noticeable increase in clumps compared to no spritz. Has this been tested?
That’s an interesting topic. I haven’t seen or noticed much issue with RDT beyond less static retention. It may be something worth looking into though.
Hi, which scale model are you using?
Waiting on the Acaia orbit which should be shipping with RPM adjustments. I don't think it'll preform much different than the P64 though. This month, it's Bunzilla month.
I haven’t followed the Acaia Orbit all that
closely, but considering their connection with Weber I would be a little wearing of the rpm adjustments working as advertised as the Key was a jamming mess and when I asked why they essentially said grind faster.
@@Sprometheus We'll see. I'm okay being a test subject on this purchase as I primarily want access to the grind by weight feature to allow my wife for easier access to espresso making, and I appreciate the aesthetics design. The orbit will be using a 250w DC brushless while the P64 uses a 300w DC brushless.
A year later how are you feeling about these results? Anything you’d add? I’m getting a df83v which has a variable speed control and I’m trying to learn about how I can use the different speeds. I brew medium roast espresso generally drank as americanos. Thoughts?
I literally came to this video because I'm in the same boat as you, tryna figure out the varied RPM with the new DF83V. I still haven't ordered mine yet, but I'm close.
Same reason I watched this video. I’m playing with my new df83v and only had it a couple days.
So? All these months later did any of you find something to go on?
All i can say after extensive testing with my df83v is that the lower end of rpm, I don't even know why you would want that because i have not yet produced anything that comes close to justifying it's use. Whatever bean I'm brewing whether it being for espresso or pour over, it just pales in comparison to what I'm achieving in sweetness and overall flavours at the higher RPM's.
Even for pour over if you think about lowering RPM because of less fines, don't. Your sacrificing all the juicy flavours for said less fines and I don't even think it matters anything as I'm not even sure it produces less fines on the lower rpm spectrum.
What i definitely know for sure is that if you want less fines just slow feed your beans into the hopper which has a huge noticable impact.
So for now I'd say its a load of crap to waste effort with lowering RPM as far as my findings go
For the next test it would be nice to do 300/800/1400 rpm on both conical and flat burrs and compare them side by side !
Lagom recommends speed number 3 on the p100 for everything from espresso to filter. I think that's around 580 RPM? Not sure what their recommendation speeds are on the p64. Interesting tests! Thanks for the all the data.
I’ve never seen a specific recommended point, but 4 on the grinder is approximately 800 rpm if you look at it like 1 is 200 and 9 is 1400. I have heard some rumblings that 4 is the ideal based on user experience, and that does seem to check out in my experience. Thanks for watching and the comment!
You should get a tachometer to test RPM of grinders. Lance Hedrick recently got one and it has proved very useful.
@@Sprometheus According to Lagom P64 user manual, setting 4 is 650rpm +/-5%.
Also, the quick guide recommend speed 4 for espresso using HU burr. For MP it's 7 for espresso and 3 for brew.
Anyway, great video and very informative.
@@Killand8 For espresso, I thought the lower RPM range shots (like at 4 on the P64 which is 650rpm) with the MP unimodal burrs didn't pull as well, I'd get channeling and generally worse results, higher RPM (setting 7 on p64, which is I think 1100RPM) worked better with that burr for me while still having amazing flavour clarity, my theory is there wasn't enough fines and it was 'too unimodal' somehow to work for espresso but it might have just been me and my machine and coffees.
With about a 1% difference, any explanation you give means very little because you can't tell if the result is statistically significant
Amazing breakdown. I've heard several people talk about the preference of a hand grinder when it comes to conical burrs stating the lower RPM reduces the amount of fines. That would seem to hold up with your findings.
Thanks Macehead! And yeah, considering conicals need far less speed to grind than flats they often are below 500RPM with a motor, and I’m not sure what your average person grinds on with their hands but it’s likely the slower speed does create less fines. That said, conicals in nature create more fines in general, so less is always in relation to flats.
@@Sprometheus Based on a few timings and revolution counts posted on coffee forums (including my own!) people grind on a direct manual grinder at 50-70 rpm
@@Sprometheus What do you think could be the main reason that conicals create more fines?
I upgraded my grinder from 1-10 to 11. Next level.
Super interesting. Would love to see similar experiments with a hand grinder. Obviously the range of speeds you can get with a hand grinder would be much smaller but I'd be curious if there's much of a difference. I imagine consistency makes a difference there as well (I.e. do you speed up or slow down throughout the grind). Would be difficult to measure your speeds though.
Yeah for sure, when I was first considering this video before I got the P64 I considered using my Niche and a hand grinder to do it, but found it difficult to get consistency or being all that accurate on RPM.
Great video, I think grinder speed is interesting but adding the extra parameter to an espresso workflow just doesn't seem worth it. Ideally coffee grinder companies would offer RPM settings that either promote clarity, body, or a middle ground like the SSP high uniformity and multipurpose. But logistially I think I would prefer getting SSP high uniformity over a slower grind just because I'm impatient and feel like it would be a "better" upgrade for that type of brew.
Hey man, as always a very cool and interesting vidéo ! I have a recommandation for a vidéo, if you find this interesting, I would very much like to see a vidéo on the C40 but with measurments, datas, différents types of filters, expresso, etc... A late breakedown of the commandante c40 we can say. I have one my self and would find that very interesting to see how someone with your experience could analyse (compare?) the C40 and explain how to get the most out of it ! Thanks for reading !
Love your vids anyway, Peace
Nil
Extreme social isolation - with a wry smile.
A little insight into my life haha
Any differences you noticed with the roast level--light versus medium versus dark--related to RPM speed? Do certain roasts work better with certain RPM?
For espresso at least, I think I generally prefer Higher RPM for darker coffees or ones that I dont love the flavour of (you don't want high flavour clarity) and want to add milk to it, for lighter roasts where I want more flavour clarity ill do lower RPM.
It shouldn’t be counter intuitive that higher rpm increases heat - kinetic energy is proportional to velocity squared where as time is just a linear proportion
Well that was the common assumption, but the Barista Hustle grinding RPM article showed slower making more heat and asserted it was time based. So in my mind constant mild friction lasting for a minute would translate to more heat than a short burst. But I would say this goes to show that there are plenty of sources giving conflicting info, or even just repeating what they’ve heard so that’s why I like to test these things out on my own.
Definitely not surprising. Look at any other cutting, drilling, or machining operation. Using a blade, bit, or burr faster always causes it to heat up more.
Thank you for experimenting and putting up some numbers. I wonder if your results would differ with a conical grinder.
I chase body in my espresso, so I'm now wondering about how fast I can crank my hand grinder without hurting myself lol. Might be time for a drill :)
Similar results with conicals I believe. Yeah some people DO use power tools or add-ons to electrify a hand grinder.
how was the temperarture of the coffee after grinding?
Depends on how long after grinding? Immediately after grinding the faster speed was about 7-10 degrees F higher than the slow.
Dont have one yet but Im waiting for a P64 in the same configuration as yours. Excited to try out some similar experiments.
did u measure acidity with a Ph meter?
Great vid as always! Would be interested to see how this changes by roast level. Perhaps, even a comparison between a dark, medium, and light roasts by low, medium, and high rpm, but that’s starting to get into crazy ANOVA territory lol
Thank you my friend! These kinds of videos are always a big undertaking and not often popular, but the real nerds appreciate it haha.
I absolutely am curious about roast level. I feel like darker roasts would create more fines due to being more brittle, and then medium a little less, and lighter the least. So you can infer from that how fines effect extraction time and yield, as well as flavor. It would be my guess the results would be similar. But maybe someday I’ll get a wild hair and try it out myself to be sure.
It would be cool to have some collabs on these video's. Have 2 creators in the coffee world discuss these tests would be sick
Did you get a chance to play with the RPMs with the Weber Key when you had it? Strangely some say the shot timing gets SLOWER (longer shots) with LOWER RPM which sounds like it has more fines at lower RPM (but by taste, it doesn't, since it still has higher clarity / cleaner results at lower RPM and maybe more body at higher RPM).
I'm just a casual coffee consumer.
Since grinder quality is rated primarily on coffee granularity and consistency the output on varying speed should likewise be priority.
What would be interesting is measuring the heat generated on the burr and grounds and if the variation on heat if any has any effect on taste.
great video. Who'd a thunk an adjustable speed grinder is even a thing? Interesting results though. Seems you could extrapolate your findings to hand grinders which will likely in the 200 rpm range (or less), suggesting that hand grinders are a good thing for espresso and maybe a good thing for pour over if you like a bright cup.
Thank you! And yeah I’d say that would be a fair thing to glean in general. But also take into account that all hand grinders use conicals which create more fines by nature of their design.
@@Sprometheus I didn't know that all hand grinders use conicals--good to know.
Try making a video on all the different burrs. I wonder if they make a ceramic burr. I have a ceramic 54mm and steel for my baratza vario-w. The ceramic has completely different teeth patterns. Someone said “Less teeth maybe more crushing then cutting” so I switched my steel burr back to ceramic to get a more balanced cup vs bright/high clarity cup from the steel burrs.
Currently using a ECM classika single boiler with PID and flow control and it’s been a lot of fun! Would love to try a p64 but for now the vario-w with flat 54 will have to do!
Spro I'm wondering what the rpm would be using a conical burr grinder to achieve the equivalent result to your 800 rpm for the most balanced espresso using flat burrs?
using my hand grinder, I will have to try grinding faster... lol (seriously, I have been contemplating connecting a hand drill to see what difference it makes in the cup)
Haha I don’t see why not! Give it a go
If that hand drill won't break your grinder's alignment, why not
Wait, are you saying you changed the grind size for the espresso to reach the same contact time and yield? This test doesn't seem useful without knowing how you had to adjust the grind size based on speed. Is it possible the difference in extraction and flavor just comes down to the fact the you adjusted the grind size?
So, is it possible to plug one’s grinder into a “Variac” type device?
Upcoming article from Jonathan Gagné's blog suggests that the trend "more speed gives more fines" depends on burr geometry: some burrs will behave in the contrary way while some others will not show significant difference.
thanks for ur honesty in thinking basically no significant difference between high, medium or low grind speeds. if i were to come to this conclusion on some reviewer channels i'd be belittled and condescended upon despite making espresso since before some of the reviewers were born. not to mention getting attacked for expressing an opinion despite nearly 40 years espresso experience, brewing, roasting, rebuilding machines.
Liked the video. I won’t lie, I’ve repeatedly seen written that “slower RPM means more heat” and I just don’t get it. Inevitably, the same kit grinding slower will take longer to complete grinding, so the energy to grind the beans will generated over a longer period of time, reducing the temperature increase.
Your observation of fast speeds being hot and grinding slowly implies there’s a lot of stuff going on in there generating heat that isn’t actually contributing to the coffee getting ground. Whether this is the grinder itself generating excess heat or potentially the coffee itself pinballing around the chamber and not getting into the burrs.
LMFAO! Extreme social isolation. You sir are hilarious.
Thank you for this interesting video. What dial setting corresponds to 800 rpm? 5?
For the espresso, at same grind size, how the rpm affect the brew time? Does the lower rpm will make the shot faster or slower?
I think the premise here is its valuable to talk about grind distribution, not grind size. The grind distribution at lower RPM is more uniform, having less fines. The grind distribution at higher RPM is less uniform, having more fines. So I’m not sure “at same grind size” is a useful concept. Unless I’ve overthought your question and all you’re asking about is differences in brew time given the same “grinder setting / burr separation”.
Pick prep being equal, more fines always means slower brew, no matter the method, right? (Assuming same puck prep ensures fines are equally distributed and channeling does not occur.)
So a little background on why I went the dialed in route Vs just changing the grind. Lower RPMs with less fines resulted in 7-10 second difference in shot time, with also was very inconsistent on taste and extraction, so it didn’t feel like valuable information on the topic. Aligning brew time per speed adjustment allowed for some consistency which allowed me to glean actual data from beyond slow grind = fast shot and Vice versa.
Ok thanks for the explanation. So it means we have to set the grind setting finer to achieve same brew time at slower rpm 👍
More questions on conical burr. The result is opposite if we grind with conical burr. The shot is faster at higher rpm, and slower at lower rpm. How do you think about that?
Very interesting experiment. Thanks for doing it. Here's a question: what happens to your experiment if you pull espresso with a paper filter at the bottom?
"...those coffee nerds looking to take the next step into extreme social isolation."
I feel attacked.
Once agin a great video that will help me get a running start on a new grinder that is headded my way soon.
I actually wondered the same question about grinder rpm. Not to long ago, me and my friend tested this idea out with our grinders. We found that like you, the lower rpm had just slightly more mojo to it. Better crispiness, sweetness, and even aroma, higher rpm made the coffee have a different smell from the lower rpm one.
Really thankful for this video. I've been wanting for someone to make a video on this for a long while, really happy to see you making one! Now I hope others make videos on this topic, too, so we can get more opinions. :)
Thank you for this info. I appreciate it and the content you share.
What is the pour over dripper stand at 1:08 ?
What kind of SSP do you use?
Timemore basic pro scale?
love the nerdy data....
Dark horse coffee!!
One of the local go-tos, a couple locations within a couple miles from home
@@Sprometheus between Bird Rock, Dark horse, Genteel, and seven seas, we’re living good! 🤙🏻
Do you think the results will be similar if you grind quicker or slower on a hand grinder?
Without a motor / drill you're not going to be able to change your RPM enough to really make a difference, I'd suggest to try keeping your grinder LEVEL and grind at a steady pace.
You had to grind finer for espresso at 1400 rpm compared to 200rpm? higher speed= more friction= more heat, adding heat to beans means you have to grind finer (see the microwave heated beans experiment before grinding).
Nice topic, now I want try to change the RPM of my EK43, anyone try ? Otherwise I need to looking for a voltage reducer
What rpm's (or range) are you seeking for it?
@@davidlogan2682 probably want try the 3 speeds he used on the video
@@goeftberg If you get a chance to post the results, I'd be interested in your findings.
I haven't read the BaristaHustle piece, but the temperature differences make sense; the burrs producing more heat and friction for the longer grind time required by a finer setting. Very impressive and timely video for the coffee community at large. I really look forward to the times when I have to rewind in order to really wrap my head around the technicality of it. (Don't worry, it all congealed by the end).
thx king
Thanks for watching my friend!
I have a Eureko Mignon (flat, 1400rpm) and Weber Key (conical, 30-150rpm). My 1:2 espresso has muted bitterness but more body from the Eureka, while the Key always give sweeter but less body shots
A lot of that is due to the burr design as well, although people may be surprised since they think flat burrs generally are higher clarity than connical burrs, but the KEYs burrs are pretty high clarity and low body, most Eureka burrs aren't too high clarity but pretty traditional / balanced.
Great video! I think it would be interesting doing this but reversed: try to get the same-ish cup with different RPM but adjusting the grind and/or quantity of coffe, to see how that affects other factors, like retention and grinding time, among other thing that I might be missing out.
It could also be useful in order to get a general idea of the coffee profile that a grinder has based on its specs.