Abe Carmeli wrote:We are experiencing a classic example of a failure to communicate here. I will take my leave now.
i just went back and reread the entire thread. the only point i can see which might have lead to the confusion was when you used the phrase "measuring a real shot". i took that as you wanted the thermofilter to mimic the thermal performance of pulling a shot through coffee. what i think you might have meant, and what i didn't get until now, was you want the
results from the thermofilter readings to better duplicate the
results you get from using a tc on top of the puck during a real shot.
if that is the case, then once again i have to ask, why? why do you want the thermofilter to mimic the results of a method which has known flaws? sure, the thermofilter isn't a perfect measurement tool, but it's better than the tc on top of the puck. so,
why do you want muted data? sure, a .8F variation is better than a 1.6F variation, but
only if it really happens and isn't just an artifact of the measurement method. if you get .8F with a cold portafilter and 1.6F with a hot one, then the .8F
doesn't really happen, it's an artifact of flawed methodology. if you get .8F variance using a tc on top of the puck, and 1.6F with the thermofilter, then the tc results are due to
flaws in the procedure. if it was the other way 'round, and you got 1.6F on the puck, and .8F with the thermofilter, then i would be worried about the thermofilter performance.
to give you another example, i used to use a 1/4" probe in my roaster as a bean temp probe. i logged lots of data and looked at lots of curves. one thing which always bugged me was the turning point on my roaster (the shift from decreasing bean temp to increasing bean temp) was well over 2 minutes, when most experts i'd talked with said the turning point should occur around 90 seconds. hmmm... i was convinced my roaster was radically underpowered. a while back, i put in a couple of more probes, and decided all the probes in the roaster should be of the same type/size, so i replaced the 1/4" probe with a 1/8" probe. guess what? my turning point shifted to just over 90 seconds. so, did my roaster suddenly gain power? no, of course not. the thermal mass of the probe decreased, so the system lag was reduced. if i stuck a bare wire bead probe in there, the turning point might change yet again. so, the problem wasn't with the roaster, but with the measurement system.
so, back to espresso. we know the coffee grounds suck heat from the brew water. we know that how much suckage occurs depends upon a number of factors i've previously listed. if we're trying to measure/track/log
machine brew water thermal performance, then minimizing/reducing/eliminating that suckage will give
more accurate results; it will better reflect what the coffee encounters initially, prior to the suckage. if your suckage rate is relatively constant, then knowing the initial conditions is what is needed. if you want to know how much suckage occurs, then put a probe on top of the puck and at the bottom of the puck and measure away!

(but it still won't tell you how well your machine performs)