by Nick on Sun Feb 10, 2008 9:56 pm
Well, paddles are, frankly, more fun to use than a switch.
I got to play with the La Marzocco FB/80 paddle machine in Vancouver. The paddles work differently than the Synesso groups... but with one key similarity.
Differently, because the Synesso paddles are two-stage switches. There are two micro-switches that are actuated at the middle and full-on positions on the paddles. The first "pre-infusion" switch opens the solenoid, the second switch actuates the pump. So it provides the somewhat-coveted "line-level pre-infusion."
However, the Synesso paddles are akin to autostick/tiptronic transmissions in cars. They resemble "true" paddle groups, just as auto-stick transmissions resemble traditional manual transmissions in the way you shift... but just as "real stickshift" includes a manual clutch-flywheel mechanism and is fundamentally different from a manual tranny, a "real paddle" is different.
The Marzocco paddle on the WBC-candidate machine was a "real paddle." As you move the paddle, the water begins to flow in an analog, progressive way that increases in flow as you move the paddle to the left. Fully-on, the pump kicks in. I don't know enough about the older paddle-group machines to be able to compare this LM group to them, but it's pretty cool nonetheless.
The key similarity is that when the pump is on, the pump is on. In other words, when one group is fully-on, the other groups act differently, because the pump is on for all groups. The rate of flow is still progressive depending on paddle-position, but it acts as you'd expect, with more flow on the group at the same corresponding paddle-position, compared to flow when the pump is off.
All said, I still don't see the point. I confess that I didn't get to make any coffee with the paddle LM, so maybe there are some improvements to the coffee quality with a particular paddle-technique. I think Mr. Champion/Hoffmann did... any feedback from you?
Nick
wreckingballcoffee.com
nickcho.com