Hello all, a few notes for the archives.

Just received the last part for my drip tray kit from WLL, and did the 
installation.  It is very painless, just add tall legs, drill a 1/4" hole in 
the drip tray, and install the cup/drain hose in the hole in the chassis below 
the drip tray; route the drain line into the sink.  This kit lets runoff fall 
from the drip tray to a cup below, and then runs from there into the rigid grey 
plastic drain hose.  There is no connection or seal between the drip tray and 
the cup, which makes it easy to still remove the drip tray and clean it if you 
wish.  The downside of this system is that the hose is pretty rigid, and if it 
flexes such that part of the hose is higher than the top of the cup, the hose 
backs up and runoff spills out of the cup onto the countertop (it becomes a 
p-trap, in effect).

Source:  Whole Latte Love, $20.23


I also had another kit laying around that I had never installed, so I thought 
I'd give it a try.  It uses a larger hole, maybe 5/8" or 3/4" (just used a 
stepped bit until the screw fit through the hole), and has a fitting that 
screws together on either side of this hole.  The fitting has a 90-degree bend 
to a barb, which attaches to a flexible silicon tubing.  The fitting has a hole 
through the middle, so it creates a positive seal/connection to the bottom of 
the drip tray.  This avoids the p-trap syndrome mentioned above, but also makes 
it a little harder to remove the drip tray--you either have to disconnect the 
hose, or unthread it from the sink and bottom of the machine.  You could also 
just scrub the drip tray in place with a soapy sponge, and then run water from 
the steam boiler to rinse.  One note on installation--this kit relies on a 
compressed o-ring for its watertight seal--when you install, using some good 
food grade grease (keg lube, etc.) helps a lot.  If you overtighten, you will 
compress the o-ring too much, and it will squish out the side, causing a leak.  
Also, you have to be VERY careful not to make the hole even a little bit too 
big, or the o-ring will slip into the hole and leak.  Get a friend to help who 
is experienced and preferably has a stepped drill bit.  A hand drill is easily 
capable of this hole, it's very thin stainless.

Source:  Chris' Coffee, $36.95, 
http://www.chriscoffee.com/products/home/plumbing/vetranodrain


In my application, I just run the drip line into the sink, so easy cleaning of 
the drip line that rests in the sink is also important.  The WLL kit is like a 
shop vac hose--corrugated on the outside and will hold a lot of sludge.  The 
Vetrano kit is smooth silicone, so it wins in this category.

In terms of being idiot-proof, the Vetrano wins for usage, because I can't 
accidentally overflow it when the hose shifts higher on the counter.  For idiot 
proof installation, the WLL kit wins due to the o-ring piece mentioned above, 
and the accurate hole drilling required.  Both have the potential for an 
occasional mess--high drain hose, or failed o-ring.

For ease of drip tray cleaning, the WLL kit wins.

For price, WLL wins, but both are reasonable.

For aesthetics and ease of routing the hose, the flexible and white/translucent 
Vetrano wins.

As to function, it's a tie--both drain the runoff as fast as you can run it 
through the machine, even when dumping the steam boiler to get rid of minerals, 
etc.


I'm keeping the Vetrano installed, as it fits my application better.  I can't 
tell you how nice it is to have this kit installed--especially with a 
plumbed-in machine.  I no longer have to worry about the machine blowing a 
gasket and draining water continuously into my house until I get home to 
discover the mess.  My recent steam wand issues are case in point--I would fill 
the drip tray 1-2 times a day--really had to keep an eye on things!

best,
Ben


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