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A used machine is a reasonable bet under 3 conditions:
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You can't.
So many things can determine how much a used machine will take to bring it back to usable condition: the machine quality, the cost of parts, what kind of water it ran on, how it was maintained, its condition when it was taken out of service, how it was prepared for storage, what conditions it was stored in, how long it was stored, etc. You can't tell much about these things unless you or your tech goes over it first.
I've been surprised recently by two machines - one that looked immaculate but took hours worth of work and internal cleaning to get working, and another that was old and dirty on the outside, yet fired right up and was making awesome espresso after 2 hours worth of light maintenance and cleaning. At this point, I look a machine over and give them a best and worst-case scenario that tends to be between $200 and $1,000.
I've never seen a used machine that was prepared properly for storage. It may happen, but I've not seen it. Machines don't like to sit idle dirty and with water in them... the longer they sit, the more expensive they get.
A used machine is a reasonable bet under 3 conditions:
1. You buy from a tech that has reconditioned it and will stand behind it.
2. You buy it "alive" (still in use on a bar) and can send your own tech to kick the tires, pull it, perform maintenance, and install it.
3. You are a tech and can recondition it yourself.
I'm with Jay. Pass.
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