You guys put the Ode on your thumbnail and I was really confused - the Ode isn’t an espresso grinder? Then I clicked the video and saw you were reviewing the Opus instead. Confusion removed!
Good question! We would generally say no. Commercial grinders are built to handle the volume. Home grinders are built to grind several times per day, not dozens or hundreds of times. If you need something more compact than a traditional commercial grinder we recommend checking this one out: www.seattlecoffeegear.com/baratza-forte-bg-brew-grinder-metal-burr
To be clear, these are the 3 best that you sell. It is okay to showcase your own products-just be honest. There are many other well reviewed grinders in this price range as well.
@@kriswelanetz9537 I got my grinder for $80 and it’s doing a perfect job for any type of coffee and believe me there are cheaper ones out there that do the same job
Espresso requires a specialized grinder that grinds very finely and consistently. A regular brew coffee grinder will not work properly for espresso. It's just science. If you think these grinders are expensive, you should see the commercial espresso grinders that you will find at a café. They cost thousands of dollars!
@@danieldougan269 my $165 grinder can grind for anything from regular coffee to very fine espresso I am sure a $20 grinder can’t do the job and you can pay $5k for a grinder that will do a $500 grinder job but it’s the Ferrari of grinders
How’s the db levels between the sette 270 and the silenzio? I’m between these two. I used to have the breville smart grinder
I use the opus daily, and you forgot to mention the micro steps underneath the hopper! They make a huge difference to getting shots dialed in
I’d add the new DF64 Gen 2. A few tweaks addressed most of the complaints about the orig; esp the ionizer that eliminates clumping and static.
You guys put the Ode on your thumbnail and I was really confused - the Ode isn’t an espresso grinder? Then I clicked the video and saw you were reviewing the Opus instead. Confusion removed!
Me too. Just learning about grinders but I know that much :)
Being early to our videos pays off... looks like you accidentally got a preview to another top 3 video releasing soon 😉
Yessss❤
Is the Sette 270 powerful enough for a small take away cafe? @SeattleCoffeeGear
Good question! We would generally say no. Commercial grinders are built to handle the volume. Home grinders are built to grind several times per day, not dozens or hundreds of times.
If you need something more compact than a traditional commercial grinder we recommend checking this one out: www.seattlecoffeegear.com/baratza-forte-bg-brew-grinder-metal-burr
Baratza-your video was already showing the ground coffee spilling out of the container. That's a waste and messy.
To be clear, these are the 3 best that you sell. It is okay to showcase your own products-just be honest.
There are many other well reviewed grinders in this price range as well.
Would you mind sharing what some of the other coffee grinders are?
That's why he said for you to mention others in the comments, yet here you are not mentioning them.
yet you've said none
Under $500 ? What is wrong with country? For god sake its just coffe
That’s pretty low budget for espresso grinders.
@@kriswelanetz9537 I got my grinder for $80 and it’s doing a perfect job for any type of coffee and believe me there are cheaper ones out there that do the same job
@ashmoh5401, I know, right? But, you made me laugh. Thanks.
Espresso requires a specialized grinder that grinds very finely and consistently.
A regular brew coffee grinder will not work properly for espresso. It's just science.
If you think these grinders are expensive, you should see the commercial espresso grinders that you will find at a café. They cost thousands of dollars!
@@danieldougan269 my $165 grinder can grind for anything from regular coffee to very fine espresso I am sure a $20 grinder can’t do the job and you can pay $5k for a grinder that will do a $500 grinder job but it’s the Ferrari of grinders