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I agree with Mike, Daniel and Liza but with a stipulation.
I do believe that you can tamp too hard or too lightly.
I did a lot of experimenting with tamp pressure before i settled on 40lbs and incorporated that into my training. I varied my pressure and adjusted the grind to compensate tamping to everywhere between 20lbs and 60lbs. 20lbs always produced channeling. Every time. No matter the grind/dose/pressure/temp. Up to 30lbs and that disappeared, but as my machine has very little in the way of flow restrictors, the basket was still beading up more quickly than i desired. 60lbs and i had dead spots. Every time. I believe that pressure that hard has a way of intensifying the effects if your grinder has any sign of clumping issues. 40lbs was dead on with slow even saturation, no channeling and no dead spots. I have no doubt that this will vary from machine to machine depending on boiler pressure, flow rate, temp etc.
But as everyone else said, pick a pressure and stick with it. Train everyone on a kitchen scale and pull it back out once per month or so. As a new employee grows stronger, 40lbs will seem lighter and lighter to them.
By the by, what machine are you guys using? I'm on a semi-auto linea (no PID yet :-(
Totally agree with that, though I suggest to the people I train 20-30 pounds since anything more than that can be really harmful to your wrist. Again, the idea of creating an even bed of espresso is the most important and as long as you have an even and consistent tamp, you should be set!
I agree with Mike, Daniel and Liza but with a stipulation.
I do believe that you can tamp too hard or too lightly.
I did a lot of experimenting with tamp pressure before i settled on 40lbs and incorporated that into my training. I varied my pressure and adjusted the grind to compensate tamping to everywhere between 20lbs and 60lbs. 20lbs always produced channeling. Every time. No matter the grind/dose/pressure/temp. Up to 30lbs and that disappeared, but as my machine has very little in the way of flow restrictors, the basket was still beading up more quickly than i desired. 60lbs and i had dead spots. Every time. I believe that pressure that hard has a way of intensifying the effects if your grinder has any sign of clumping issues. 40lbs was dead on with slow even saturation, no channeling and no dead spots. I have no doubt that this will vary from machine to machine depending on boiler pressure, flow rate, temp etc.
But as everyone else said, pick a pressure and stick with it. Train everyone on a kitchen scale and pull it back out once per month or so. As a new employee grows stronger, 40lbs will seem lighter and lighter to them.
Maybe everyone (except me) knows this, but how do you determine what tamp pressure you are actually applying?
TIA
Ron, the Country Guy
Maybe everyone (except me) knows this, but how do you determine what tamp pressure you are actually applying?
TIA
Ron, the Country Guy
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