Grinder Calibration & Maintenance
The single most influential piece of equipment in any cafe. Treated like a tool, not an appliance.
Why this matters for professionals
If you could trade your espresso machine for a better grinder, you should. Burr quality and burr condition determine the particle distribution that water sees during extraction. A misaligned, worn, or dirty grinder will produce inconsistent shots regardless of what coffee or machine you pair with it. Most cafes neglect grinder maintenance until something visibly breaks; by then the equipment has been producing sub-spec coffee for months.
This article covers burr geometry, alignment, particle distribution analysis, the difference between single-dose and hopper-fed workflows, and a maintenance schedule that keeps the grinder in production-grade calibration year-round.
Burr Geometry
Flat burrs shear coffee between two parallel discs rotating against each other. They produce narrower particle distributions — more particles at the target size, fewer fines and boulders. Standard for espresso work.
Conical burrs have a cone-shaped center burr inside a ring burr. Particles spiral through. Distribution is typically broader — more fines, more boulders. Body in the cup is fuller but extraction is more variable.
Burr diameter matters because larger burrs grind cooler (less heat transfer to coffee) and faster. 64 mm flat is entry pro; 75-83 mm flat is high-end. Above 98 mm enters commercial territory.
Burr Alignment
Misaligned burrs produce one-sided wear, asymmetric extraction, and worse particle distribution. To check alignment: take a permanent marker and color the entire surface of one burr. Reinstall. Run a few grams of coffee through. The marker will wear off only where the burrs actually contact. Perfect alignment shows uniform wear across the burr face; misalignment shows wear concentrated on one side.
To correct: use shims (thin metal washers) between the burr mount and chassis to tilt the carrier. Iterate: shim, mark, grind, inspect. Most quality commercial grinders ship within tolerance, but home grinders and high-use commercial units often need shimming after 6-12 months.
Particle Distribution Analysis
The grind output of any grinder produces a distribution of particle sizes. Plot frequency (y-axis) against particle size (x-axis) and you get a curve. Quality grinders produce narrow, unimodal distributions: one peak at the target size. Poor grinders produce broad or bimodal distributions: one peak of fines, one peak of boulders.
Maintenance Schedule
| Frequency | Task |
|---|---|
| Daily | Brush hopper, doser, chute. Wipe exterior. |
| Weekly | Run 1-2 tablespoons of cleaning tablets (Cafiza, Urnex Grindz) through. |
| Monthly | Disassemble upper burr carrier; vacuum and brush all surfaces. |
| Quarterly | Full burr removal and deep clean. Check alignment. |
| Annually | Inspect burrs for wear. Replace at 800-1200 kg through for commercial flat burrs. |
Single-Dose vs Hopper-Fed
Hopper-fed grinders keep beans in a clear hopper above the burrs. Pro: faster service, less labor. Con: bean age accelerates from light exposure and temperature; partially-ground beans linger between shots; you lose precision per shot.
Single-dose grinders take exactly the dose per shot. Pro: maximum freshness, no static issues with proper RDT, consistency. Con: slower service. Solution for high-volume bars: short-hopper grinders with 30-60g capacity and rapid turnover.
Common Mistakes
- Never cleaning. Oils oxidize, accumulate, and create rancid character on subsequent shots.
- Adjusting grind without purging. The first 2-3 g after adjustment is still old grind.
- Ignoring temperature. Hot burrs (after long runs) grind differently than cold burrs.
- Using oily/dark roasts on espresso burrs intended for light roasts. Oil residue is hard to remove and shifts subsequent extractions.
- Replacing burrs late. Worn burrs produce wider distributions; shots drift slowly. Track kg ground.
- Ignoring static. Use Ross Droplet Technique (RDT) — a drop of water on beans before grinding — to reduce static cling.
Further Reading
Lance Hedrick's YouTube content on grinders is canonical. Greg Pullman's videos cover burr alignment. The Decent Espresso forums and Home Barista deep-dive technical maintenance. SCA Equipment Maintenance certifications are the formal path. Industry sources: Mahlkönig, Mythos, Anfim, Niche all publish technical manuals.
Quality coffee deserves a calibrated grinder
Seelaz's specialty coffee collection rewards the bars that maintain their equipment to spec.
ملخص بالعربية
المطحنة هي أهم قطعة في البار، وتعديلها وصيانتها يتحكمان في جودة كل فنجان. أنواع الشفرات: المسطحة (flat) تعطي توزيع جسيمات أضيق وأفضل للإسبريسو الدقيق، والمخروطية (conical) تعطي جسماً أكبر وتوزيعاً أوسع. فحص محاذاة الشفرات واجب كل 6-12 شهر: اصبغ الشفرة بقلم تحديد ثم اطحن قليلاً، وحيث تزول الصبغة تعرف أين تتلامس الشفرات. جدول الصيانة: تنظيف يومي بالفرشاة، تنظيف أسبوعي بأقراص تنظيف خاصة (Cafiza/Grindz)، تفكيك شهري وفحص ربع سنوي للمحاذاة. تستبدل الشفرات بعد طحن حوالي 1000 كج للشفرات التجارية المسطحة.