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Thanks a lot, Mike! Now I want a Fiorenzato Bricoletta! That's a really nice machine! :)
In terms of sheer efficiency, double boilers hand heat exchangers their asses.
A couple of thoughts, totally skirting the HX vs DB question.
What is the service support for Faema and La Marzocco in your area? Faema support in some areas (including ours) is spotty, and since parts are distributed through the La Cimbali network things can be really difficult.
Pass on the autosteam option. You can do better with a traditional wand. Plus, the autowands give you many more moving parts and controls to fail. Maintenance will be more expensive for a machine with an auto wand (unless it just sits there unused).
How old is the Linea?
On the PID question, I submit for your consideration the Competition Aurelia. HX + PID to good effect. (OK, maybe I won't skirt the hX vs DB thing...)
Me? I like hX machines, but I'd go for the Linea.
Have mentioned it here previously, but here goes again. I've had the pleasure of using two La Marzocco machines, a 3 group Linea and a 2 group FB/80. The Linea wasn't my fave by any means. Each of the 3 groups had varying water flow rates as well as lousy temperature stability. Could've been the refurb job that was done on it or maybe I just didn't understand the machine all that well. BUT did work on it daily for 7-8 months and was hard pressed to ever get anything I'd call great from it regardless of what tinkering was done. Now the FB/80 was a great machine. Much more refined than the Linea and much better consistency based on the time I spent on it. Really like the fit/finish of the LMs.
My daily driver is a 2 group Aurelia and I love using it. Now it does have some plastic on it, but the machine has a nice look to it IMO and the fit/finish is quite nice. Under the hood it's all business and I really like the parts layout and fairly good access to everything.
I do agree on skipping the autowand gadgets. I do use ours for heating cider and that sort of thing. Will say it works great for things of that nature because the temperature can be programmed and it hits that point every single time. But I wouldn't waste time trying to texture milk with it.
Don't know about any sort of flushing technique because I've never had to do any. Anytime I've checked the group temp. it is always in the 199-200 range, which is where I choose to extract at. Never seen it register more than 1 degree higher/lower than those numbers regardless of whether I'm extracting 1 double each minute or 1 each hour. It is always predictable and simply dead-on.
Have mentioned it here previously, but here goes again. I've had the pleasure of using two La Marzocco machines, a 3 group Linea and a 2 group FB/80. The Linea wasn't my fave by any means. Each of the 3 groups had varying water flow rates as well as lousy temperature stability. Could've been the refurb job that was done on it or maybe I just didn't understand the machine all that well. BUT did work on it daily for 7-8 months and was hard pressed to ever get anything I'd call great from it regardless of what tinkering was done. Now the FB/80 was a great machine. Much more refined than the Linea and much better consistency based on the time I spent on it. Really like the fit/finish of the LMs.
If I'm not mistaken only the Aurelia Competizione has a PID control, which might give it a slight advantage in stability. Based on my research the Volumetric and semi-auto Aurelias all have the same controls, therefore should have the same temperature stability. Believe me when I tell you, you'd be hard pressed to find a HX more stable than what I've seen with my Aurelia. Especially in stock form.
Have never used the Faema machine with the auto steam. I'll take your word for it that it is better than the Aurelia Smart Wand. Having said that I still believe a manual steam wand will offer better results than any type of automated system.
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