After quite a bit of research into finding a good hand grinder for French Press, I settled on a Peugeot Nostalgie, as I had heard a lot of great things about Peugeot mills in general (i.e. the consistency in the ranges ideal for FP and drip). Well I received it today, and after a bit of playing around found that while at its "finest" setting the burr shaft is completely stable and produces a consistently small grind with little dust, as the adjustment is dialed for coarser grinds (it is top-adjusted) the "wobble" of the inner burr shaft becomes really noticeable. This translates to more variation in the consistency of the grind than I was hoping for.
I can understand that with a hopper full of beans, the issue of shaft wobble may not be a huge deal since the grinds will presumably keep the inner burr in place, but it seems like a detriment in the beginning and end of the grind. I am a little disappointed, as even from a novice engineering perspective, it doesn't seem like much to simply add a bearing of some sort to stabilize the inner burr shaft and avoid wobbling altogether, especially for a grinder of this cost. Has anyone else had any experience with similar manual mills? If so, is there a fix? I would like to avoid returning the mill if I can, so technical advice would be greatly appreciated. Failing that, I'd welcome any advice on manual mills other than Peugeot (new Zassenhaus'?) I could try.
Google is telling me that the Peugeot mill is around 150 dollars, does that sound right to you? If so, i'd send that puppy right back, that is too much money to get a substandard manual grind! I also noticed that the Peugeot seems to have stepped adjustments.
I bought an Orphan Espresso Lido manual grinder, which costs $165.00 new. The inner burr axle is supported by two bearings, so the gap at a course grind remains stable. The adjustment is stepless, so you will can really fine tune the grind. I've been using mine for french press and espresso grinds, I am very pleased with it's performance. As a bonus, it can be taken completely apart and cleaned with relative ease.
I almost bought a used Lido from a forum member here, good price too. I assume he is still selling it, maybe you two should talk?
Yeah, it was roughly $125 on Amazon for what I thought would be a solid and durable mill, but I guess it's my fault for not foreseeing the stability issues. To the returns department it shall go.
I have checked out the LIDO, and from what you're saying (as well as, apparently, a ton of other very satisfied users) it seems like a solid choice. Thanks for your help!
Yeah, it was roughly $125 on Amazon for what I thought would be a solid and durable mill, but I guess it's my fault for not foreseeing the stability issues. To the returns department it shall go.
I have checked out the LIDO, and from what you're saying (as well as, apparently, a ton of other very satisfied users) it seems like a solid choice. Thanks for your help!
Yeah, it was roughly $125 on Amazon for what I thought would be a solid and durable mill, but I guess it's my fault for not foreseeing the stability issues. To the returns department it shall go.
I have checked out the LIDO, and from what you're saying (as well as, apparently, a ton of other very satisfied users) it seems like a solid choice. Thanks for your help!
I am very new to all of this, it was only after reading all of the praise on forums like this one, that I decided on a Lido. At first I was pretty set on a Hario Skerton or a porlex but read that they also suffer a bit from burr wobble. I really stretched my budget to buy the Lido, but after one week with it I have no regrets.
Symbols: = New Posts since your last visit = No New Posts since last visit = Newest post
Forum Rules: No profanity, illegal acts or personal attacks will be tolerated in these discussion boards. No commercial posting of any nature will be tolerated; only private sales by private individuals, in the "Buy and Sell" forum. No cross posting allowed - do not post your topic to more than one forum, nor repost a topic to the same forum. Who Can Read The Forum? Anyone can read posts in these discussion boards. Who Can Post New Topics? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post new topics. Who Can Post Replies? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post replies. Can Photos be posted? Anyone can post photos in their new topics or replies. Who can change or delete posts? Any CoffeeGeek member can edit their own posts. Only moderators can delete posts. Probationary Period: If you are a new signup for CoffeeGeek, you cannot promote, endorse, criticise or otherwise post an unsolicited endorsement for any company, product or service in your first five postings.