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neutronicusyesterday at 8:05 PM2 repliesview on HN

The practical benefit is having basically zero parts.

We got a Flair manual espresso maker after our Gaggia Classic crapped out after a year (hard water buildup, probably). I de-scaled, replaced some parts, still didn't work.


Replies

pluggertoday at 12:44 AM

You've got to disassemble the boiler and remove the scale from there. I run a Gaggia Classic at home with really hard water and my machine literally stopped flowing due to scale buildup. Once I fully pulled it apart and scraped all the scale out of the inside of the boiler it started running flawlessly.

https://greatinfusions.com/blog/great-infusions-coffee-blog/...

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satvikpendemtoday at 5:32 AM

Exact same thing happened to me, I sold the Gaggia and now I'm considering getting a manual one. The only issue is hot water as well as needing a separate steam wand, I wish there was an all in one solution for that.