Where does scale in an espresso machine come from?
~~~Calcium, mostly in my area, but there are other heavy metals in our water
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What can be done to minimize it?
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~~~my stradegy with the pourover Salvatore One Black I had was to filter my own well water by passing it through a small RO system that would filter about 15-20 gallons/day. I routed this filtered water (essentially 0 PPM hardness after) through a canister filled with Chris Coffee's Carbon Calcite cartridge so it would place the hardness level of the water at 50 PPM, verified with a water hardness test strip. I collected this water in a 2.5 gallon water bottle then dispensed into seperate 1 gallon bottles
When I get my Rimini espresso machine project to the point I need water for it, I think I'm going to use this same water but in a 5 gallon water bottle using a Flo-Jet pump for pressure. I bought the Flo-Jet pump long ago for testing purposes. It will be awkward handling 5 gallon bottles of water, but at least I will know what is and isn't in my water
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Does heat exacerbate scaling/does it matter if the machine is on or off?
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~~~It's my understanding if you flush your boiler using the hot water tap, purging a few cups of water through it weekly, that will at least garuntee you have fresh water in your boiler, depending on capacity how much and often you should flush but I don't see how hot water kept under pressure would allow the hardness levels to climb. I say flush your boiler to keep the water fresh and moving
Remember too Peter, you are pulling shots for yourself, not a lunch crowd 7 days a week. The amount of water going through your machine will be miniscule compared to commercial operations
Jake
Reddick Fla.
If he's got golf clubs in his truck or a camper in his driveway, I don't hire him.
--Lou Holtz, football coach