It's kind of whack, isn't it.  My steam pressure came at 1.3.  I don't recall 
what brew pressure was 'cuz I've fiddled with it several times.  

Tell me, are the pressure gauges considered to generally accurate?  I wish I 
had a an external gauge (for temp too) but all I can go by are the internal 
ones.  I try to trust the sensory cues  but external validation would be nice.


On Apr 24, 2011, at 6:54 AM, [email protected] wrote:

> Great post Ben! I've often wondered why the factory settings for
> Brewtus seem so sacked - 12.5 brew pressure and .8 steam pressure.....
> Do you think it has to do with the 220 versus 110 difference between
> the European/Aussie versus North American versions of the machine? In
> other words, do these settings make more sense at 220?
> 
> Pete
> 
> On Apr 23, 9:32 pm, Benjamin McCafferty <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> My vendor explained to me that raising the pressure is largely
>>> unnecessary, because all it does is speed up the process.
>> 
>> Having a double boiler machine is also unnecessary, it just makes better 
>> espresso.  :)  Just poking a little fun, no offense intended.  Speed is 
>> pretty important for me, when I'm entertaining and have 5 or 6 people 
>> waiting on coffees (and me being the last in that line...).  And there IS a 
>> difference--good microfoam depends on being able to roll the milk after 
>> stretching, keeping tiny bubbles in solution.  If you can't roll, your 
>> bubbles will be converging to the surface, getting bigger and drying out.  
>> Sometimes you can swirl the pitcher afterwards and get them back into 
>> solution, sometimes you can't.  Because of your posts, though, I'm curious 
>> enough that I'm going to ask every cafe I visit what they have their steam 
>> pressure set to.
>> 
>>> He also
>>> maintains that all raising the steam pressure does is shorten the life
>>> of the heating element and pressure stat.
>> 
>> To quote a bad movie, "You wanna live forever?"  Four years into my machine, 
>> steam set to 1.45, no failures of either part.  They are not going to kill 
>> your wallet anyway.  Living with a difficult process for years, to save a 
>> few bucks on a part because it lasted 12 months longer, is false economy.  
>> Having a well-tuned machine that does what you want it to, with minimal 
>> compromises, is what it's about.  I don't know what you pay over there, but 
>> over here we pay $1,500+ for these machines, hardly a purchase made by 
>> someone on a super tight budget.
>> 
>> However, I'm just type-A enough that I'll probably lower my steam to .8 just 
>> so I can say that I have, and see how I like the result.  :)
>> 
>> talk soon,
>> bmc
> 
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