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Preinfusion on the La Marzocco GS3 - Page 2

Postby Matthew Brinski on Sun Feb 10, 2008 12:19 am

Nick wrote:Pre-infusion on a machine with heavy flow restriction (like the 0.6mm restrictors on the GS/3) is redundant.

Stick with the pre-infusion set off.



Is that for sure? I understand that it may be redundant concerning possible increased forgiveness, but what about extraction/flavor profiles? I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. If that's the case though, the paddles on the recently tested LM in Vancouver (and the eventual paddle kit for the GS3) is just a bunch of show-boating, no?



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Postby luca on Sun Feb 10, 2008 1:13 am

Matthew Brinski wrote:Is that for sure? I understand that it may be redundant concerning possible increased forgiveness, but what about extraction/flavor profiles? I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. If that's the case though, the paddles on the recently tested LM in Vancouver (and the eventual paddle kit for the GS3) is just a bunch of show-boating, no?


I worked at a cafe with a Cyncra and we found that the line pressure position on the paddle was cool, but didn't really result in a better tasting cup or a more forgiving extraction, so we just moved the paddle all the way to the left. Nick has a Synesso around somewhere, so it would be interesting to hear what he thinks. I haven't heard of anyone seriously using the line pressure position on the Cyncra lever in a cafe.

Sitting half way across the world from the action, I have heard conflicting reports about the various LM paddle groups that have been around. Some have said that they are effectively a three position switch, like the Cyncra paddle. Others have said that they are an improvement over the Cyncra paddle in that you can do all out pressure profiling with them. (Not sure how the earlier LM paddle groups worked.) If the latter is the case, then the new LM paddles might allow for even niftier things than preinfusion, like gradually reducing the pressure before stopping the shot - there's a video on the LM site with Bill Crossland saying that you can vary the brew pressure. I think that Greg did some experimentation on that with his own rig not too long ago. If the LM paddles are just a glorified three position switch, then I'd say that they're probably still more than showboating just because paddle groups are nice and ergonomic to use.

Cheers,

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Postby Jacob on Sun Feb 10, 2008 7:24 am

malachi wrote:It's "pump-pulse" pre-infusion.
The pump goes on for a programmable amount of time, then shuts off for a programmable amount of time, then goes on again.

The motor keeps running, it's a solenoid that's closes and opens!

houdina wrote:I am not sure if the GS3 is hooked up to the water supply, if it will work the same way without the pump running during pre-infusion.

Nope, but with a software-update it should be possible!


Usually the paddle-group controls pre-infusion, but people have been talking about a version that controlled the brew-pressure instead - I would love to know more about this :D

coffeed.com:
Goatherd wrote:
gscace wrote:
Goatherd wrote:I assume a few folks got to play with the concept Linea with paddle groups at the SCAA show. You could control preinfusion and the brew pressure with the paddles and watch the pressure changes in real time on the gauge. It was tha sh**! I pulled some shots using ideas from this thread and got some interesting results. Also pulled some shots trying to mimic the profile from a lever machine and got similar results. Unfortunately I only got about 6 shots pulled until I was feeling the pressure to move on. The ESI folks said that when this design comes out (a few years maybe) you will be able to retro-fit Lineas and GB/5s to use the paddles. FYI you can only control the pressure of one group at a time. Any other feedback on this machine...MarkP, AndyS, GregS...did ya'll check this thing out?

Now that's cool! I saw it, and like an idiot I didn't ask Bill what the deal was with it. Duhhhh. Damn!

-Greg

Yeah Greg,
I've kinda been surprised that folks haven't been talking about it more. The dude I talked to at the booth said I was the first person to say, "Holy sh**! I can pull shots to mimic a lever machine with this thing!" (could that possibly be true as of Sunday afternoon?) Honestly, I find it hard to believe that no one else saw/played with this thing... anyone?...anyone? I mean, we'll (in the future) be able to retro-fit GB/5s with the paddles! Am I the only one freaking out here!?! Is this not as great as it seems? Am I missing something?
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Postby Matthew Brinski on Sun Feb 10, 2008 11:46 am

luca wrote:I worked at a cafe with a Cyncra and we found that the line pressure position on the paddle was cool, but didn't really result in a better tasting cup or a more forgiving extraction, so we just moved the paddle all the way to the left. Nick has a Synesso around somewhere, so it would be interesting to hear what he thinks. I haven't heard of anyone seriously using the line pressure position on the Cyncra lever in a cafe.




I gathered the same thing last year when I asked a couple of baristas at Espresso Vivace about whether they manually preinfuse with the Cyncra paddles. similar to Nick's statement (and yours), they replied that it wasn't beneficial due to the restricted pressure ramp up that the machine exhibited. I was curious about the size of the gicleurs, but they didn't know.

I'm just curious about whole preinfusion thing still, especially regarding the different methods that are claimed to be preinfusion:

Pump-pulse
Restriction jets
manual line pressure
lever
E61 group head designed

etc.

It may seem like "old news" to most, but I haven't been able to really find any relatively conclusive information about the benefits of one type over the other - that is, if any benefits exist at all.


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Postby malachi on Sun Feb 10, 2008 6:47 pm

Also... with a Synesso, if you're pulling a shot on one group I don't think there is any way to preinfuse on a second group (correct me if this has changed). So commercial use of preinfusion is unrealistic.
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Postby pdx on Sun Feb 10, 2008 7:31 pm

malachi wrote:Also... with a Synesso, if you're pulling a shot on one group I don't think there is any way to preinfuse on a second group (correct me if this has changed). So commercial use of preinfusion is unrealistic.


That's correct- the water comes through the pump at line pressure for preinfusion, so if the pump is on you get 9 bar rather than line pressure. I guess you could bump the preinfusion switch quickly on the second group- you would end up with the same "pulse" preinfusion scheme that the GS3 uses.

I wouldn't bother, though. I only use the preinfusion position on my Synesso to bleed some water after shots to clean the screen, not for shot pulling.
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Postby 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?
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Postby micki on Mon Feb 11, 2008 3:35 am

What worries me about the GS/3 infusion is that the pressure is released at end of the "preinfusion" ... I don't like the idea that some good stuff is going down the drain, that should have been in my cup. I have ceased using preinfusion and am not going back (maybe if I get a paddle group ... :) )

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Postby AndyS on Mon Feb 11, 2008 7:02 am

micki wrote:What worries me about the GS/3 infusion is that the pressure is released at end of the "preinfusion" ... I don't like the idea that some good stuff is going down the drain


If the parameters are set properly, I don't believe a significant amount of pressure is built up. And I also don't believe the three way is opened during the dwell time...but it's been a while since I played with a GS3.
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Postby roblumba on Mon Feb 11, 2008 12:35 pm

The default pre-infusion setting on the GS3 only let's out enough water to soak the puck. There is not sufficient pressure built up for anything to go down the drain at de-pressurization.

Nevertheless, I've turned it off recently. Unfortunately, I also changed blends at the same time so I don't really know how it effected the shot quality but using a Naked portafilter, it seems to be extracting just fine. I think I'll probably need more time to really become intimately familiar with how pre-infusion effects the shot because I don't go through pounds of coffee, doing taste test. I just do my normal routine and consume the coffee at my normal rate.
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