okaychatt wrote:Dan - When will the layman's terms article be ready? I'm lost, and I want to understand.
The proposed article mentioned above would be about the mechanisms of the E61 design, not how it addresses temperature stability, which is already discussed in
Espresso 201: Heat Exchangers. In the case of a HX thermosyphon it describes, the grouphead is heated to a percentage of the (steam) boiler temperature by circulating water. Ideally that percentage of heat transfer is tuned such that the grouphead is very near the desired brew temperature. For the machines I've tested, it works surprisingly well with the grouphead idling in the 195-197F range.
As you said, the flush evacuates the overheated water from the heat exchanger, but it also warms the grouphead to brew temperature. Through continual use and attention to correct flushing, the grouphead will zero in on the brew temperature. A very neat, efficient design, however it does depend on the barista managing temperature properly.
The grouphead of a saturated group acts as a direct extension of the boiler:
See Cutaway of La Marzocco saturated grouphead for more detailsIn this case, the boiler is at brew temperature, not steam temperature. There's not much for the barista to do temperature-wise, since the boiler temperature directly dictates the brew temperature. In contrast, the barista must "surf" an HX machine to the desired brew temperature. This
video using the thermofilter demonstrates that managing HX temperature really isn't that difficult, but there's no arguing it's more involved than machines having a dedicated brew boiler.
okaychatt wrote:Why is that considered an advantage? Wouldn't it take more cooling flushes than the HX? Is it a matter of stability somehow?
My above comments cover the operational advantages of a saturated group (i.e., one less thing to worry about) and imply the advantages with regard to exceptional espresso (consistent, flat temperature profile). That's where disagreement begins concerning the merits of a slant-L (flat) temperature profile versus a "humped" temperature profile, the latter being unique to HX machines (*).
I'm firmly in the "it depends" camp.
(*) ...and many lever machines.