Long Term Fellow Opus Review - Should You Still Buy a Fellow Opus in 2024?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 96

  • @nickterzulli8912
    @nickterzulli8912 9 месяцев назад +36

    Just wanted to say thank you for the kind words and thank you for the review. Totally get your feedback! Also, I wanted to just mention quickly that we at Fellow had 4 engineers working tirelessly on this thing (Andrew, Matt, and Pat plus myself), plus all of the people who did marketing / planning / logistics, etc.! I just wanted you to know the names of everyone else who worked to get this out. We're always looking to make things better. :)

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +2

      Nick! Thanks so much for dropping in! And thanks for letting me know where the credit is due - I’ll be sure to give a shout-out to the rest of the engineer squad in the next Fellow-related vid!

  • @nameausstehend
    @nameausstehend 9 месяцев назад +9

    Thanks for the shoutout, happy you enjoy the app!

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +1

      No problem! More people should know about it. Thanks again for creating it.

    • @zulsecengko5978
      @zulsecengko5978 9 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the app..i downloaded it even before i got my opus

  • @novideohereatall
    @novideohereatall 3 месяца назад +4

    Just got my Opus. I’m probably THE target group for this grinder as I’m into coffee, but also a mere mortal. Not a barista, not a die hard enthusiast. I lived with a $90 Wilfa WSCG2 for years, but got a cheapo espresso machine for fun. ”all purpose” really is THE selling point, price next. I just can’t excuse a purchase of much more than $200.
    And I got to say. Damn this grinder is something else. The build quality, the quiet operation, the button feel, the grind quality, the tolerances, magnetic and well designed catch cup. This grinder is awesome. The fact that this is just about 2-2.5x the price of my previous just boggles my mind. Great job fellow!

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  3 месяца назад

      Hey, thanks for your comment. I’m glad you’re having a good time with the Opus. It’s funny to hear you talk about the Wilfa Svart - it was a grinder I was strongly considering for my first electric, but this also happened to be around the time the Ode 1.0 Kickstarter was launching, and I was a filter only person so I went with that instead. So I think the Opus is a great next grinder, especially at the price point - considering what it’s capable of. And it’s definitely a great example of how far grinders have come over the years. I hope the Opus serves you well for many years!

  • @ronnyskaar3737
    @ronnyskaar3737 11 дней назад +1

    I will buy this for all my brewing, from espresso, V60 to frenchpress. I don't want two grinder in my kitchen, and I think the espresso will be quite good enough. Looking at the state of the world, if a little static and some scratches are my problems, I should count myself lucky. Thanks for the review.

  • @rickydjoenaedy1284
    @rickydjoenaedy1284 21 день назад +1

    thank you for this great video... so i'm wondering, what are you suggesting for me, it just for home usage.. mainly espresso.. and the tools that I got for making it is the Staresso SP300, Rok and flair pro 2.. currently the grinder i use is Staresso discovery ii d6e.. and I'm thinking to upgrade my grinder... I'm quite sure to buy the Fellow Opus, but after watching your video, mmmm... I. kinda rethink about it.. lol...

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  21 день назад

      if you brew mainly espresso, then no I don’t think the Opus is the perfect grinder for you. I also don’t know how much of a real upgrade it is from your Discovery. I would look at other grinders in a slightly higher price range - Lagom Mini, Varia VS3, the Sniper, etc.

    • @rickydjoenaedy1284
      @rickydjoenaedy1284 20 дней назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson How about Turin SK40?

  • @bigsqueegie
    @bigsqueegie Месяц назад +1

    I agree with a lot of this. After a year or so grinding for filter we've been pretty happy with it. The reason for going with the Opus was to be able to grind for espresso in the future, which we'll soon be doing. Not perfect but a good compromise for a home barista on a budget

  • @amandaworth8599
    @amandaworth8599 4 месяца назад +2

    Very interesting! I'm looking for an electric grinder for filter coffee, and I'm on the fence between Fellow Opus vs Fellow Ode Gen 1 vs Baratza Encore (not ESP). Thoughts? Other suggestions in same price range? My old grinder is a blade, so any of these would theoretically be an improvement :)

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  4 месяца назад

      I would probably suggest the Opus from a grind quality and workflow perspective, but the Encore is also great. I think it comes down to looks between those two! I would avoid the Gen 1 Ode because it may not grind finely enough for smaller batches of filter coffee.

  • @leader95949
    @leader95949 Месяц назад +1

    My concern with the opus has been retention. I use compressed air.
    Which is great for removing most of the ground retention. It's difficult to get behind the built-in grill at the bottom of the housing.And I was thinking of removing the grill to make grinds flow more easily and make it easier to remove retention .Your thoughts.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  Месяц назад

      thanks for your comment, and sorry for the delayed response. I think the ionizer might be built into the grill? not sure. if that IS the case, then there’s most likely a hole behind the grill where the electronics feed into. in which case you have the new problem of grounds ingress into the chassis. it would also void the warranty. you could remove the grill to test this and share your results with the internet. but if there is a hole then you’re left with a potentially voided warranty and a grinder you’re not 100% happy with. if that’s a risk you’re willing to take then I’d say go for it. I’m all for taking things apart in the name of discovery.

  • @jabberock3654
    @jabberock3654 5 месяцев назад +2

    I love my Opus, and largely use it for espresso. That being said, I may not be attempting to dial my grind in as perfectly as many more experienced espresso enthusiasts. The price for me, combined with the ease of cleaning and use makes it well worth the purchase.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  5 месяцев назад

      if you’re having a good experience, then that’s what counts! I’m glad it’s working well for you.

  • @havenrecording1892
    @havenrecording1892 8 месяцев назад +4

    100% about the static!

  • @yunsookim3848
    @yunsookim3848 2 месяца назад +1

    Great video! What setting do you suggest for light roast (e.g. gesha) for filter coffee? Tried 6 but too much fine grinds

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you! It depends on the process method and dose size, but since it’s a Gesha I would recommend grinding much courser than you are used to. I know that might be counter intuitive. There’s a video by Coffee Chronicler called ‘Pour Over Perfection - 3 Advanced Tips’ that I watched recently that touches on this subject. If you feel 6 is too fine, then I might just skip 7 and start at 8 to be safe. I am
      nervous to strongly recommend anything because I know how expensive Gesha is 😅
      The Opus should have a fairly consistent particle distribution in the filter coffee range, but each unit tends to be calibrated a bit differently. If you’re experiencing the fines as you brew, then I would recommend less agitation, but if you’re experiencing them as you grind to the point where you easily notice them then I’m concerned that the burrs are out of alignment. This is unlikely, but not impossible.
      Hope this helps!

    • @yunsookim3848
      @yunsookim3848 2 месяца назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson thank you so much for your reply. learned a lot from your previous videos

  • @drewhicks31
    @drewhicks31 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for the review! As someone with an Opus, it's nice to hear other thoughts on it. I own it in white and haven't noticed any of the wear that seems to plague the black units. The white also hides any fingerprints or smudging (but coffee turns it brown haha so thats something to keep up with). Your comment about some people finding the grinder to be set more coarse or more fine from the factory than intended is very interesting as I always thought I was grinding WAY higher into the numbers than others for filter coffee. So maybe mine is just a bit more fine! Love the filter coffee on this and also was easy to dial in for moka pot! Haven't made it down the espresso rabbit hole yet, so curious to see my thoughts there.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +1

      I’m happy you enjoyed the review. Thank you for your comment. It is very interesting that the white color way is more durable. We know Fellow spent more time on the white and hearing that makes me wonder if could be a reason. Sometimes I think about getting more white gear because it does look super cool. Agreed, the filter coffee is awesome. Please check back in if do end up using it for espresso!

  • @indeskys9714
    @indeskys9714 9 месяцев назад +3

    The best way I found to clean the antistatic rods on my ode 2 is to use my front facing camera and a Q-tip. I found if you do this often, it keeps the retention down. Hope this helps

  • @dazey8706
    @dazey8706 5 месяцев назад +1

    incredibly insightful review thank you! how does the retention on the opus compare to that of the ode? would you say its any better? was literally about to check out on buying the opus rnrn but this video made me reconsider.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  5 месяцев назад +1

      thank you! I appreciate your kind words. if comparing to the Ode Gen 1 for filter coffee only - MUCH better on the Opus. I would use minimal RDT, if at all. the ionizer keeps things in check. for espresso on the Opus, it’s not great. the ionizer struggles and RDT seems to make things worse rather than better because of the chute design.
      I have an Ode Gen 1 and thought about upgrading to the Gen 2 for the ionizer but ended up going with the Timemore Sculptor. I’ve got the 078 but the 064 is good too.
      hope this helps!

    • @dazey8706
      @dazey8706 5 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson helps a ton thank you!

  • @AleX-je2sw
    @AleX-je2sw 8 месяцев назад +2

    I have been using Opus for about three months now and I have to say I agree with almost every point you made in the review. The retention is pretty bad if you don't tap, but the straight-down arrangment of the grinder helps to keep the retention minimal once you do tap.
    The V60s from Opus have been great, the espressos (using the Flair) are hit or miss, but I'd say it's rather a workflow issue on my part.
    Out of the box it was grinding way too fine for me, but after readjusting the dial I'm pretty happy with it.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  8 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! I’m happy you’re getting good results with it. In regards to the retention, there have been times after cleaning the grinder where I opted not to use RDT and while a ton of grounds got stuck in the chute, everything came out with a single tap. I saw someone on Reddit say that the Opus doesn’t have a retention issue so much as it has a ‘blockage’ issue due to the chute design, so sometimes I wonder if RDT isn’t just making the problem worse.

    • @AleX-je2sw
      @AleX-je2sw 8 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson You know, now that you mention it, I realize that ever since I started doing RDT with the Opus I need more taps to get out the dose I put in. I'll have to do some side-by-sides later.

  • @RobinJanssen976
    @RobinJanssen976 Месяц назад

    Hey, quick question. I only drink espresso/lungo from my breville/sage bambino. No filter or other kinds of coffee. In my case, it's just about getting the right settings for espresso and afterwards never touching the settings again. Right?

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  Месяц назад

      Hello, thank you for comment. To answer your question - yes and no. For the exact same coffee, roast and roast date - yes. You can dial in a single bag of coffee and probably leave it there for a week or so and expect good tasting shots before you start to experience drift. The Bambino is fairly consistent so long as you burn a shot’s worth of water to preheat the machine and portafilter and are only pulling a shot or two after each use (because the temperature will continue to increase - not by much, but just so you know). For each new coffee,
      you should dial back in and reset your single and double buttons to that coffee (I use the single button for my current caffeinated coffee and the double for decaf). If you find yourself drinking different coffees but in the same style - i.e medium roast, washed process coffees or blends with similar tasting notes - then you can probably set the single shot button to a setting that will work on average for most coffees and work as a control for any new coffee, and use the double shot button to dial in even closer. Hope this helps!

  • @wail4084
    @wail4084 8 месяцев назад

    Hey, I've owned a Fellow Opus for around three months now. To make the grinding process cleaner I was considering starting to use RDT, but I was scared it might break the machine. How long have you owned your Opus? You said you used RDT, and I'd just like to know over what period of time you used it

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  8 месяцев назад

      Hey there! RDT is totally fine, even in higher amounts. I owned the Opus for about 11 months and used 2-4 sprays the entire time. I took the Opus apart several times for regular cleaning and RDT never showed any negative affect on the internals. Burrs always looked great - clean, sharp, consistent.
      However! I and other users have wondered if RDT doesn't merely exacerbate the retention of the grinder as opposed to reducing it. Everyone's grinder, environment and workflow is different - but you should definitely try it out and see if it helps.

    • @wail4084
      @wail4084 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@stephenthorsteinsson thank you very much for the help! I appreciate it a lot and will definitely give it a try

  • @Bodomi
    @Bodomi Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for the review.
    I've decided not to get it due to the very large amount of retention, that was a deal-breaker for me.

  • @jabrown9678
    @jabrown9678 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve been using my Opus for espresso for the last four months now, and just recently the retention has turned into caking just below the burr. The caking is so bad that tapping on the top will not knock it loose, I have to remove the outer ring and brush it out for every shot. Any suggestions on what I would need to clean to prevent this?

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  6 месяцев назад +1

      To my immediate knowledge it could be two things: One: It depends on if you're using RDT, and how much. While RDT does help to reduce static, it also seems to increase retention - mostly due to caking. It's worse with darker roasts, but seems to happen to any coffee regardless. The chute design seems to be particularly prone to caking. There's also the small cavity where the ionizer sits in. You might try using less RDT or not using RDT at all (weird proposal, I know, but the ionizer should do some of the work) and slow feeding the beans to see if that reduces retention due to caking.
      If you haven't been doing RDT at all, then I'm stumped. Maybe the opposite is true and RDT would actually help. That would be convenient.
      Two: it could be because the outer burr carrier isn't perfectly level/flush, so there's a small gap that allows coffee to build up and cake right underneath. Here's a link to a reddit thread detailing that theory and possible shimming to re-align: www.reddit.com/r/espresso/comments/16llqeb/fellow_opus_recalibration/
      Hope this helps, let me know what happens!

    • @jabrown9678
      @jabrown9678 6 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson thanks for the help! I have been using RDT, it is on a dark roast, and I did err on the liberal dosage side with my method. I quit spraying my beans when the caking started but that didn’t help, I am going to try checking the gap under the outer ring for any debris that I didn’t notice because that is where the caking seems to start. Thanks again!

    • @jinabae
      @jinabae 3 месяца назад

      For me, RDT works way better for darker roast in terms of static and retention 😮 And for medium roast spraying leads to more retention and caking. I live in a humid climate. Just throwing in my 2

  • @zulsecengko5978
    @zulsecengko5978 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have an opus for about a month. Its my first electric grinder and i say for the bucks it does the job pretty good. Retention is pretty damn but i learned that if u keep 1 bean and grind that single bean after you grind the others then plunge it(using the lid), itll come out good (most of it i guess).

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +3

      Interesting. I haven't heard of this one bean trick. I'll give it a try! Thanks for the tip.

  • @vitorpl
    @vitorpl 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the review Stephen. Can I ask how the grind time has been for your specific grinder? I've been having issues with mine after using it for a couple of months, where it now takes about a minute to grind 19g for espresso. It was OK at first (25-30s), but noticed it's been getting worse.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! I ran some quick tests with a fresh, fairly light roast:
      at setting 1: 29s

    • @nameausstehend
      @nameausstehend 9 месяцев назад

      Mine has the exact same issue! When I first encountered it I couldn't find anyone else on the internet. I think it's a QC issue tbh. My first unit started getting extremely slow after only a day. Fellow sent me a replacement, which was fine for a while, but has now slowed down exactly how you're describing it. Might be worth contacting Fellow about it :)

    • @vitorpl
      @vitorpl 9 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson this is super interesting. My machine can pull around 9 bars, but I can never go below the 3 mark on the grinder - calibration is dfifferent alright.
      The popcorn effect seems to be the biggest culprit, as loading the grinder with more than 1 shot seems to speed up the process considerably. I'll investigate the plug selection
      Thanks for your input! Can I ask what you mean by setting 1 (-6)?

    • @vitorpl
      @vitorpl 9 месяцев назад

      @@nameausstehend This sucks. Can I ask what you're doing with this replacement that you got?
      I'm in touch with Fellow, but having bought this in Europe, I need to go through the reseller and their supplier, which is a pain. I'm not sure if I should take the refund or try a new unit.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад

      ​@@vitorpl No problem! I hope things work out with the diagnosis.
      1 (-6) was my way of saying "outer ring: 1, inner ring: -6", or as fine as it can be set.

  • @notreallydaedalus
    @notreallydaedalus 7 месяцев назад

    I'm interested on the Opus because I want a reasonably quick and quiet single dose grinder for immersion brewing at the office. It sounds like it might still be a good choice for me -- do you have any other recommendations? Thanks!

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  7 месяцев назад

      At a $195 price point, the Opus is very hard to beat from a noise perspective. The faster a grinder is, the more noise it’s liable to put out, but I think the Opus hits a great middle ground. The only other recommendations I can offer would be for much more expensive grinders - Niche Zero, Timemore Sculptor 078, Lagom P64. I’d stick with the Opus. The DF64 isn’t super loud but I don’t know if I enjoy the nature or texture of the sound it makes, if that helps.

  • @ashleenwicklow5120
    @ashleenwicklow5120 9 месяцев назад

    This is a great video! Are you going to review anything next?

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you! Will do a mini review/short of the Timemore Black Mirror Nano scale soon!

  • @pastornicholas1517
    @pastornicholas1517 9 месяцев назад

    Good Review, I appreciate it. I got the Opus and the Bambino Plus at Christmas time as my first journey into espresso after being a Chemex man for 10 years. I agree, the space to dial in for espresso is limited, and without a lot of other controls from the bambino, the grind is one of the main things I can change. But medium-darker roasts behave really well. I'm still trying to build a tasting pallet that might drive me to use the inner adjustment ring. So far, I've just stuck to the stock settings and never had problems with choking the machine or uncorrectable bitterness. I've also found the ionizer really good, haven't sprayed my beans at all like I was expecting to and I have 0 mess.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! Definitely an awesome combo. I love the Bambino Plus and would say that my experiences so far match yours. It's been such a great start. It sounds like you know what you're doing! I've thought about snagging a bottomless portafilter and experimenting with different basket sizes, but so far I've been too happy with my results to change anything. I'm glad your ionizer is working well!

  • @WINTFOX
    @WINTFOX 9 месяцев назад

    I don't know if it's inherently like that or if it's a flaw. The magnet on the base of my OPUS is loose. It follows the cup every time I take it out, making a gurgling sound. Only used for less than a month, quite annoying. I use another way to avoid scratches on the base, using mouse feet, it looks quite good and is a bit more slippery.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +1

      That would drive me crazy. I know it's a small thing but I would be tempted to reach out to Fellow about it. Mouse feet is a great idea, thank you for sharing!

  • @funfunnyfunnest
    @funfunnyfunnest 4 месяца назад

    Question I use this just for filter coffee it jams daily. It makes great coffee, but it drives me insane that I have to bang it to get the coffee out. Any suggestions of how to fix this?

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  4 месяца назад

      What roast level is your coffee, and are you using RDT? If you’re using RDT, I might recommend using less or none at all. Next suggestion after that would be to try slow feeding the beans. If you are having to hit it after this, one tap should work to get it all past the chute. I’ve had this same thing happen to me, and I think it’s related to the chute design. Hope this helps.

  • @TheMatrix854
    @TheMatrix854 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks Stephen, good video. One thing that I've been questioning is, how we know that the finest setting is actually 0, for example with a hand grinder you know you are at zero because the burrs al slightly locked, here with the Opus that is not happening.
    😂 I had a hard time putting back in place the inner burr and I hate I need to spank it every time I grind.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you! Mine doesn't seem to have a true zero either. I updated the video description with a link to a Reddit thread of someone recalibrating theirs. It's a bit invasive (requires taking off the cover and therefore voiding the warranty), but they did a pretty solid job with the walkthrough.
      Sometimes your coffee grinder needs a love tap or two 🤣

    • @TheMatrix854
      @TheMatrix854 9 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson thank you, I'll take a look to the link and see if is a good option to try that

  • @Semiosphere
    @Semiosphere 9 месяцев назад

    Nice review. I bought the Opus a while ago. When I took it out of the box the default settings applied, e.g. that number two was actually the espresso range and so forth. Then I made the mistake of doing those microadjustments after which number 3 is now what number 2 used to be., and number 2 and everything between 2 and 3 is just powder that'll choke my espresso machine. There's literally no instruction on how to reset the machine (apart from some tutorial where you first have to tear it to pieces, which I'm not going to do). Fellow's opus intruction videos don't really work or tell anything about how to reset it. And frankly a grinder isn't supposed to work like this. If you can't adjust and readjust without losing your mind and not knowing where you are on the grind scale, it's pretty bad. Yes, it does grind fine enough for espresso. Can I recommend it? Definitely not.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад +1

      Sheesh. Wait, it’s still choking at 3 even with the blue inner ring back at 0? If so, dang. I like to pretend the blue ring doesn’t exist and that seems to help me from disassociating while I’m adjusting the grind. And yeah, there’s no true way to calibrate it without taking it apart and voiding the warranty. But I guess a silver lining is that it’s better to have a grinder on the finer side than the courser. If it’s really not working for you then it might be worth reaching out to Fellow. Anyway, thanks for watching the video, I appreciate it!

    • @Semiosphere
      @Semiosphere 9 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson Yes, choking at 3 and making espresso at 3.1 or 3.2 etc. It's just tricky not being able to really dial in the shot properly. I might get a hand grinder instead. I did actually contact the seller. I'll see what they say. I might end up sending it back, since I don't see how this can be fixed without the voiding of warranty and knowing what to do.

  • @falopio67
    @falopio67 8 месяцев назад

    hi i drink mostly moka,,,i havce a baratxa but his time is ending burr really bad this days,,,wouls like bigger diametter gringer any suggestion df64 little prycy but i think at least will last loner , bartazxa lasted ok like a 1.5 year thanks

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  8 месяцев назад +1

      Hello! Truthfully, I don’t know. Baratza grinders like the Encore should last longer than a year and a half - I’m sorry that yours has not. If it’s going through a lot of use at a finer grind then the plastic components could be wearing out faster than usual. It is repairable, if you’re up for it, and I would recommend contacting Baratza customer service to see if they can help.
      If not, and you’re looking for a new grinder that will go through heavy use, then I’d look at brands with good warranties - Baratza, Turin and MiiCoffee have one year warranties. MiiCoffee’s can be extended to three years for an extra $59. The Fellow Opus comes with a two year warranty, which becomes three if you register the grinder on their website (a fairly simple and free process). So for that reason I would go for the Opus.
      But if the DF64 grinder is the one you want, then that’s most likely the grinder that you will be happy with (if you don’t like the Opus).
      Hope this helps!

  • @celstark
    @celstark 7 месяцев назад +4

    I’m that guy you thought was crazy. You’re not skipping gears or damaging anything. It’s actually why Fellow tells you to do. They have you move to 6, adjust the inner ring and then move back. The 6 is arbitrary. They want to make sure you have room to adjust (don’t go past 0) and they want to make sure you let the adjustment take place (move the outer dial).
    The key insight (which you get when you watch that step less video) is that the inner ring doesn’t move the burr. It doesn’t adjust the grind. It adjusts the outer ring.
    Think of it like this. You’ve got a screw thread that when you turn, moves the burr. You’ve got a knob on that that has detents. Say, every quarter turn you have a detent. Now, you have nice steps as you adjust that knob and can return to the same spot. Imagine now that you can rotate the detents by a small amount. Doing so didn’t actually move the screw - just where the detents are on the screw. The detents are rotated say a quarter turn. Rotate the screw now and it’ll land in a different spot as the detent stops it now between previous positions. But, you have to move the screw to make that happen. You’ve adjusted the adjuster not the burr itself. Maybe 1 click will do it but exercising it makes sure it’s settled.
    The problem is that the overall movement has some flex and lack of precision. Going way out and back and you may not hit that same exact burr location.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  7 месяцев назад +2

      Hey Craig, thanks for watching the video and moreover, thanks for your insight on the inner workings of the Opus.
      And absolutely, yes, that makes sense. Everything you said makes sense. It's probably the explanation I would offer most people using the grinder for the first time. It's funny all the math we've been doing, when maybe it's not really that necessary. I think where most people stumble is that they can't see the adjustment taking place, so they're under the impression that it hasn't (admittedly, myself included).
      When you couple this with the aforementioned play/movement in the ring due to the flex of the plastic and lack of precision, I think this is what ends up with the perceived lack of consistency in the Opus.

  • @renaldiputra7491
    @renaldiputra7491 4 месяца назад

    I bought opus in November 2023 and experience the huge retention, so naturally I always knock the machine to get the ground coffee out. Maybe one time I knocked too hard and suddenly (February 2024) I see the burr is somewhat wobbly and the grind time increased 2-3x times longer. I took it to the shop where I buy the opus and they do not have the 'knowledge' to problem / repair the grinder.
    I have now make peace with the longer grind times, but found it to be more inconsistent than before. When I pull 2 espresso shots with no breaks, the first one seems normal (19 to 40gr in 25 seconds), but the second one is just flowing too fast (19 to 40gr in 20 seconds). That's a huge different and I don't know why.
    I couldn't find a long term review when I bought this grinder, so yeah, I wish I didn't buy this grinder (for espresso) haha.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  4 месяца назад

      Hey, thanks for your comment. I’m sorry to hear about the troubles you’re experiencing. Are you weighing the dose on the way out of the grinder as well? It could be a retention issue with different amounts of coffee getting stuck between different doses.
      The burr wobble is definitely a huge issue. I’m wondering if the stationary burr has actually come off of its seat - I would bypass the shop you bought it from and bring it up with Fellow customer service directly.
      Hope this helps - again, I’m sorry you’re experiencing this issue and I hope you’re able to resolve it!

  • @dopplereffect9246
    @dopplereffect9246 9 месяцев назад

    I've recently bought an opus along with an espresso machine (that costs a third the price of the opus...) and I have been trying to learn it. Mostly for espresso right now, but also later on for filter coffee too. Although, that is while saying that my current filter coffee machine is a keurig with reusable k-cups, so my standards are pretty low tbh. It's been alright, I figured all the trial and error was just a part of learning how to do espresso.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  9 месяцев назад

      Congrats! Indeed, trial and error is all part of the fun! Absolutely nothing wrong with a Keurig. I've never actually tried putting high quality specialty coffee in a Keurig, so who knows, could be great! I'm curious how the espresso turns out!

  • @Earendilvingilot13
    @Earendilvingilot13 7 месяцев назад +1

    my issue with this grinder is that whenever I adjust both inner and outer ring, subsequent grounds are more fine that what I originally set, requiring further adjustments, this is insane! and also the grind time has increased about 10 more seconds, now I have to push the button twice rather than just once for 17.5g. I should have not bought this one tbh.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  7 месяцев назад +1

      yes, it does take a little longer than one might hope to find your desired grind. while it is a great deal for the price, the Encore ESP may be a better fit. resale value on Facebook Marketplace is pretty high if you feel like selling the Opus in lieu of something else.

  • @MMilewski78
    @MMilewski78 Месяц назад +1

    The static is a nightmare. I have a white version and the coffee is everywhere. Retention also is a joke. Apart of that, it is a OK grinder. Definatelly will look for something better next time.

  • @ericpilson5337
    @ericpilson5337 8 месяцев назад +1

    the inner ring is super confusing, I tried for a while to figure it out for espresso but eventually gave up and just use it for our daily filter coffee. also the need to keep hitting it to deal with retention is loud and frustrating.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  7 месяцев назад

      I hear you. I find that mentally it helps if you think of it like a bongo drum. Every morning my neighbors get a free drum solo. They’re welcome.

  • @tigerag29607
    @tigerag29607 6 месяцев назад

    Why does my grinder grind but not grind.. Like it doesn't produce coffee just spins.... Like I've taken top burr out cleaned and all. Still nothibg. Wtf..

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  6 месяцев назад +1

      You’re positive the burrs are spinning when you engage the motor? There’s a little pin that pushes in when the hopper is put on, but you can push it down with a pen or knife to see what’s happening with the hopper off. There might be a blockage in the chute, or the grinder may be set so fine that it can’t grab on to the beans. Definitely reach out to customer service too!

    • @tigerag29607
      @tigerag29607 6 месяцев назад

      @@stephenthorsteinsson hey thanks for the actual response, I was honestly just complaining lol. Good info! Yea i pushed the button down with a spoon and they are spinning and tossing beans everywhere but not actually feeding into the grinder well.. It worked for like 2 weeks flawlessly and now it's like I can get like 16 grams through after like 10 cycles and beating on it constantly.. I bought a paint brush and got down in there, a pipe cleaner and got the burrs sparkly and everything.. Put it back together and nothing.. Even bought a shop vac lol.. Like nothing is working..

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  6 месяцев назад

      @@tigerag29607 No worries, happy to listen. Sorry for the late reply. I guess my first questions are - have you been using RDT, and did you remove both the outer and inner burr when cleaning? RDT seems to result in hard caking over time, and there could be a lot of caked coffee (that even a vacuum won't get it) under the inner burr that's blocking beans from getting through.
      If you did get under the inner burr, then you've already done everything you can, and so you should reach out to Fellow customer service for sure.

  • @listenu
    @listenu 2 месяца назад +1

    Ive drank crap coffee for 30 years and now overnight im looking to spend hundreds / thousands to make better coffee at home lol. So i decided to not go completely insane right away and ordered the opus. Do i even love coffee? I dunno!

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  2 месяца назад

      I think the Opus is a lucid choice. Combine it with beans from a reputable roaster and you should be able to make some great coffee.

  • @joshk528
    @joshk528 17 дней назад +1

    Easy answer.. No

  • @dtkp33355
    @dtkp33355 7 месяцев назад +2

    LOL why is this so hard for people to understand? If you're at 2 on the outer ring, then adjust the inner ring coarser, you are just 50 microns coarser than 2. You don't go adjusting the outer ring after that..... YOU are making it too complicated.

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  6 месяцев назад +2

      If you move the inner ring on its own, sure. But people tend to move the outer ring to adjust the inner, and so they’ll wind up left of 2 instead of right. Then you gotta click it back. It’s not complicated, but it is initially confusing. Thanks for your comment!

  • @dipping_stock9656
    @dipping_stock9656 4 месяца назад +1

    I came from the Ode 1. Tapping comes 2nd nature to me. Lol

  • @zell71
    @zell71 5 месяцев назад

    I regret buying the opus. Retention is ridiculous and now mine makes a burning (electrical) smell inside. I’m just waiting for it to die to justifying a better grinder

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  5 месяцев назад

      I’m sorry, that sucks. Have you tried reaching out to customer service? You’re still within warranty period.

  • @acecarolino101
    @acecarolino101 7 месяцев назад

    For someone who has a microphone on the side your audio levels are very weak, can barely hear anything

    • @stephenthorsteinsson
      @stephenthorsteinsson  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for your feedback! I just got some lav mics, hopefully they’ll be an improvement in the next video!