by cannonfodder on Sun Apr 16, 2006 11:42 pm
So if I understand correctly, having to large of a water jet would give me to high of a water debit. That prevents me from getting a proper preinfusion and hence an even extraction. Because of my excessive flow rate, the puck is getting hammered and I am getting an uneven extraction.
On my Isomac, I get two distinct water flows and pressure readings on my brew gauge. Once I engaged the pump, I would get a slower trickle from the group, the pressure would rise to about 5 bar and hold there for 6 or 7 seconds. Then the pump sound would deepen, as if it was encountering some resistance, and the pressure would increase to 9 bar.
That delay was my water debit (preinfusion) phase as the expansion chamber filled to capacity. The audible change in the pump would be when my expansion chamber was full and the pump started to encounter some resistance. If I were to measure the water vs. time, I should be getting around 34ml for my 17 gram double in that preinfusion stage. Your optimal situation would be 34ml in 10 seconds.
After the debit stage you are flowing an additional 60ml in 20-25 seconds. So you are actually pushing around 3oz of water to achieve the 2oz shot. The extra 1oz is retained in the properly saturated puck. So from an unrestricted group, you should be getting 94ml in 30-35 seconds?
To change the flow on an E61 machine, you would change the gicleur. To achieve the same impact on my Faema, I would put a smaller jet in the group.
With the high flow rate of my current machine, any small defect in the puck is exaggerated. Any small difference in the distribution is exasperated due to the lack of water debit and I am rewarded with a lopsided extraction cone and a blah cup.
Like I said at the top of the thread, I am still learning and trying to take my understanding to the next stage. And get a decent cup at the same time.
Dave Stephens