Hey Thanks for the videos :) What's the best way to use the grinder : put the beans in and then start the grinder or start the grinder and then put the beans ?
Start first and then put the bean. That way it will be easier for the motor because it already gain enough momentum. If you put the bean first and then start the motor, the motor will pull HUGE amount of current momentarily to gain the inital momentum plus crushing the bean at the same time. It's not good for the power adapter it will overheat and not live a long life.
Impossible to remove the fist part of the exit chute. Any idea? Does that mean that if I can't clean this part, the product will quickly become defective?
Thanks 👍 This really helps with deciding which one to purchase. Shame about the ionising not being there - it's one of the selling points on the others.
Hello, what is the pressure setting? 9 bar? I have df83 and Flair58 lever machine. So burrs are perfectly aligned - just checked it. But i must grind on numbers 5-6 to get the right timing with 9 bar.. and it would be no problem, but the grain tends to stuck on those low settings😂 im lost
You are supposed to time at first drop. not pressing a button. many variations from machines between pressing and drop, such as preinfusions, and pump variations. Cups are huge for espresso. Try slower feeding the grinder, and lower the grind setting. Should be smoother
Great new channel. Your videos are clear, great lighting, audio (for my ears) is clear. Succinct and tightly shot too. Congrats, great work and very helpful.
Thank you very much for the video. This is a must watch if you get a Turin grinder, especially DF83. Helps me a lot for sure!! :) Greetings from germany.
Thank you klav! It depends on how you use the grinder and a little bit of luck, we have users who have used the DF64 for 3+ years with no replacement whereas small amount of users need within warranty :) just for a rough idea. Rest assured if it happens within 1 year you get it under warranty from us if you purchased from us. These videos is also to demonstrate how easy it is to maintain and access our DF54/DF64 line of grinders with no fear.
I can hear the anion generator arcing constantly in my unit with the mains on (motor is off). Is this normal? It was completely silent when I first got the unit. Does this mean accumulated coffee grounds are bridging the pins? If so, where are they located and can they be cleaned? Finally, wouldn't it be better if the anion generator power was connected to the motor power wires? That way it activates only when the motor is on.
Hi, if I buy from your website and choose the burrs to be any SSP version instead of the stock DLC burrs, will you deliver the grinder together with both the stock burrs and the SSP burrs that I choose? Or only the SSP burrs shall be delivered?
@@5698max You get it randomly. They have still mixed in stock. But as i know they started recently adding just black one. You have to be lucky or wait longer to be sure. The only chance u get black as well is You have to order something extra, or other burrs so they open packed ones and switch the cup.
Same here. I ordered straight from DF64COFFEE and got old stock. I’m not impressed at all. Hoping they sort me out as the webpage and even my email receipt pictured the new stock.
Just took apart and did my first deep clean of my df64. This is the only video for this on this particular grinder and I see it was uploaded 8 days ago. Just in time. Thanks so much for this 🙏
meh its fine. I use it with rdt and never use the bellows. two taps with the palm of the hand are enough. the bigger problem is stalling. with light roasts and low rpm the 64v stalls. a lot. at 600 rpm I have to slow feed it; otherwise it will stall every time. I probably wouldn't buy the 64v again. I only bought it because the gen2 was sold out at the time.
@@gr3g0r5 I ended up getting the DF83V. Very happy. no retention, no popcorn, no stalling even at 300rpm, no mess, no brainer. Just a FYI, slow feeding changes the grind setting to much finer, and does alter flavors.
They are crimp terminals, not wire nuts. Granted he didn't use the correct tool to crimp them, when properly crimped, crimp ferrules/ terminals are much more secure than actual wire nuts. Wire nuts are what the Americans use for their electrical wiring and simply twist on. These aren't connections that are meant to resist movement in regular use, nor are they meant to be end user serviceable; the use of crimp terminal is perfectly good and there's no need for a reusable connection like Wagos which would drive the price up significantly.
Now offer it with grind-by-weight and optional SSP burrs Would order one immediately for my cafe Mahlkönig e80s gbw performance at less than half the price sounds like a banger combination