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Curious, Bry- what do you guys do to the boiler first thing in the morning? do you empty it out to start out with fresh water? (i hope i am not sounding confrontational- becuase that is certainly not my intent!)
Bryan Wray said: I've often wondered why the water that sits in a boiler in a brewer all day is considered different than the water that sits in a boiler in a machine. I'm sure there truly is a good answer to this, it's just that I've never heard it. Every answer I have heard has to do with the amount of water that travels through the brewer being of high volume and the amount traveling through the espresso machine being of low volume. What if the espresso machine were high volume? Does this change anything?
Bryan Wray said: I've often wondered why the water that sits in a boiler in a brewer all day is considered different than the water that sits in a boiler in a machine. I'm sure there truly is a good answer to this, it's just that I've never heard it. Every answer I have heard has to do with the amount of water that travels through the brewer being of high volume and the amount traveling through the espresso machine being of low volume. What if the espresso machine were high volume? Does this change anything?
The main difference between a boiler and a hot water tank is, well, one is a boiler and one isn't. A boiler changes a portion of its water charge into water vapor (steam). In that process, any impurities in the water get left behind in the liquid portion, increasing the concentration of those impurities in the boiler water. When steam is drawn off through the steam wand, and more water is converted to steam, the concentration of impurities in the water increases. When the boiler refill activates, new water (with the same initial level of impurities) is introduced. The new water does dilute the concentration of impurities somewhat, but it will always remain higher than the initial concentration (even with repeated flushing through the hot water wand) because the boiler's job is to produce steam, not just hot water.
The $10,000 question is: does it matter?
The complex answer: it depends.
The simple answer: if the water coming out of the hot water wand tastes the same as or no worse than the water going into the boiler, then it doesn't matter.
Usually it tastes skanky. :(
Another issue has to do with the materials used in the construction of boilers versus brewers, and mineral leeching of the standing water.
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