Actually, disregard that last email - WLL sets their machines to 9
bar, not 10 like I said. I dropped my pressure another bar to nine.

Pete

On Apr 10, 3:18 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Thanks for the info, Ira re/ the Kill-A-Watt meter. Hi Ben: I seem to
> remember hearing that the difference between the brew gauge and a
> portafilter gauge is approximately 1 bar. I guess I was going off of
> what WLL sets their machines at, which is 10 bar. I live in Canada
> where the vendor I purchased from ships the machines unadjusted. Good
> to know re/ channeling behavior. I will see how things go and perhaps
> make a further adjustment. Thanks again,
>
> Pete
>
> On Apr 10, 1:08 pm, Benjamin McCafferty <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Glad to hear it.  You still may try lowering to 9.  Why do you think the 
> > gauge is wrong?  One thing I have experienced is that I have a hard time 
> > stopping channeling if I'm above 9 bar on the grind, 9.5 or so on the blind 
> > PF.  So if you're getting holes/spraying at 10, and feel your dosing and 
> > distribution is good, you're probably still a bit high on pressure.
> > b
> > On Apr 10, 2011, at 11:45 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> > > Ben - I lowered my brew pressure from 12 to about 10 bar, which I
> > > believe is really 9 bar because of errors on the brew pressure gauge.
> > > Pulled two shots with tight grinds and....no more fluctuating brew
> > > pressure. Thanks! Will try moving Brewtus to another outlet later this
> > > afternoon to see if I can solve the flickering lights issue. However,
> > > thanks a bunch for your help with this.
>
> > > cheers,
>
> > > Pete
>
> > > On Apr 10, 11:24 am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
> > > wrote:
> > >> Thanks Ben and Ira,
>
> > >> Great suggestions as usual. I'll work through the suggestions and let
> > >> you know how I make out.
>
> > >> Pete
>
> > >> On Apr 10, 11:15 am, Ira <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > >>> At 08:27 AM 4/10/2011, you wrote:
>
> > >>>> ANY help/suggestions would be appreciated.
>
> > >>> Do you have a Volt Meter?  If not they are cheap as is a
> > >>> Kill-A-Watt.  Plug the meter into the same outlet as your Brewtus,
> > >>> and watch the voltage as the Brewtus operates. If it varies more than
> > >>> a couple of volts, you need to fix it as something is getting hot
> > >>> somewhere, likely near the panel. I'm guessing you don't play with
> > >>> electricity, but if you do and want more pointers just ask.
>
> > >>> As an example with my POS meter, it reads 117.5 and drops to 115.9
> > >>> with the Brewtus steam boiler element on. Cycling the pump has no
> > >>> effect on the voltage.
>
> > >>> Ira
>
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