0:41: Intro 2:23: Specs comparison 4:40: List of Tests 5:04: Niche: Quick usage guide 5:42: Baratza: Quick usage guide 6:57: Word of caution with Baratza 8:04: Sifter Test 13:01: Taste Test 13:27: Final Comparision and Conclusion
@@KyleRowsell Hi Kyle, if you put this in your description (with 0:00: Start, too) it'll show up as chapters on your video, which I'm sure people would find useful :)
I admit the sette had some issues. I own one. I do have to say that Baratza customer support and commitment to improve the product is probably one of the best in the industry. They were extremely good shipping Me all upgraded parts with incredible clear work instructions. You don’t have to worry with this company.
I’m surprised to hear of the gearbox failures, mine is almost 7 years old but only probably ran 1.8 cups per day on average. I’m replacing my gearbox hoping the new one is quieter, it is starting to sound a little clunky. The noise has always been the worst part of the machine and there isn’t much that can be done to dampen it.
I had the Sette 30 for a few months now. No problem and love the results! I had a Breville pro something grinder before. I had it for a few years. The Sette Up the game of my espresso sooo much!
I have the 270. They sell a different internal burr for filter coffee. It takes maybe 3 mins to swap. Works well for me since I do both espresso and filter depending on mood.
Yes, I am late to the party but I have watched this video a couple of times as well as your review of the Sette 30. I went with the Sette 30. Here is why. I got a great deal on a new 30 at $200. Ordered the BG burr, the Sette 270 Adjustment Assembly, an additional cone and the drop down portafilter fork for the 30. Ok, why did I do this? Here is the logic and setup. I put the BG burr in the original 30 assembly. Stuck the original espresso burr in the 270 assembly. Dialed in both, the 30 assembly for my pour over and the 270 assembly for my preferred bean and espresso grind. A simple 30 second swap of the assembly and I have the best of both worlds. $200 for the 30, $140 for the extras = dual machines for $340. I can easily pick up a spare gear assembly for $40 and literally never have to worry about downtime and still be under the price of the 270....
I've had my Sette 270Wi for more than a year and I have used it at least three times a day: 1X for drip brewing & 2X for making espresso. Haven't had a single problem.
This is the first video of yours I've seen. You did a great job comparing these grinders, and I've subscribed to your channel. I pre-ordered the Sette 270 so I've had it for a long time. I considered pre-ordering the Niche when it was funding since it looks amazing, but ended up passing due to the cost. I completely agree with your comments regarding the reliability of the Sette and Baratza's support. My gear box broke after 4 years of very light use and Baratza replaced it for free. I had other issues as well, which took over 70 emails over several months to diagnose and fix and turned out to be a faulty adjustment assembly, which Baratza also replaced for free.
Love the Sette 270. I've had one now going on 3+ years with daily use. Yes, I had to replace the gears-free of charge from Baratza-and yes, it is LOUD in the still of the morning. BUT it does provide very consistent results for espresso, and does quite well for V60 pour-overs. For the money, a very good grinder with exceptional customer service.
@@isaacbugalho Yes. I finally got it squared away. Was using my Hario hand crank with my Chemex while I waited for them to replace. Their CS email system took forever. Many emails back-and-forth and several reps later, I received my replacement part free of charge.
Sadly in 2022, here in Australia -- the Niche Zero is well over $1000 AUD on pre-order alone. Or buy it in stock from a reseller for $1700... but the 270 was $400 brand new and I got it immediately lol
I got the Niche about 6 months ago. I had to wait, but it arrived as predicted. I've had lower cost grinders before, but I don't think I'll ever need to upgrade now. It is a thing of beauty and very well made. I would say that this is a machine whereas the Sette is a kitchen appliance. Pay cheap, pay twice. Once you've come to terms with the cost, I don't hink you'll look back. Oh, and I emailed them and they answered my queries. One thing, which is really useful, the grind receptacle is the same size as a standard portafilter, so you just invert it - no mess. Very little static, easy to dose, the list goes on... Very happy with mine : )
I had the Sette and now have the Niche, both are great in the cup but the reliability thus far and quietness of Niche is worth the extra money. The only thing I miss from the Sette is the speed it was about 4 seconds for a 18 gram dose where the Niche is more like 16. Nither are that long but once you get used to the 4 second grind time the longer grind time of the Niche is more noticeable.
Decibels are a logarithmic unit of measure. 3db difference is twice the volume. Regarding the grind setting, it seems that if you adjusted the sette just a bit finer the result would be virtually the same as the niche.
3 dB is twice the sound energy, as in watts of amplifier power, NOT twice as loud. 10 db is twice the perceived volume (and 10 times the sound energy).
I don't think that app or phone mic is really accurate, the Niche is super quiet (probably quieter than the Specialita or about the same with a lower tone) from what I've heard the Sette is super loud (tone sounds bad too which is probably why people complain about the sound), I'd think the Niche should be a lot lower than what he measured.
Hi Kyle, great video. I use my sette 270 for making V60 and Chemex coffee al the time with good results, ratio 15g/250ml and grind settings between 16 -18. Why is the 270 not suitable?
I saw the Sette 270 at a local coffee event, picked it up, noticed how light it is (all that plastic, and the motor is obviously not very heavy) and moved on. I eventually purchased an all metal Eureka Mignon and use it for espresso single-dosing. I love its micro-adjustment feature for dialing in exactly what I want.
Wow, what an excellent video. One of the best reviews of any coffee product I've seen. I have the Sette 270 and the reviewer is spot on - my gearbox broke, but in my case the control panel broke twice - both times a little drop of water (washback from my steamer). All 3 times the supplier took care of it, but it's a few days without a grinder each time. Also, this thing is redicuoulsy LOUD! It's impossible to have a friend over and continue a conversation while this thing grinds. It's insane. My ears hurt every damn time and I've had it for 2 years now.
Hello Kyle, I would like to start by thanking you for your videos which allow us to make better purchasing decisions. I'm not sure if anyone asked the question (as I didn't have time to read all the reviews), but I would like to know which of the two grinders is the easier to maintain (cleaning the grinders and the grinding chamber). I have owned the Baratza Sette 270 for three years (I make 2 to 3 espressos per day), and I have never had a problem with my grinder (I cross my fingers and touch wood). I'm about to turn 65, and I'm looking at Niche Zero for a birthday present, I just have to find a reason to spoil myself a little. Thank you again for your involvement, it helps us to better choose our purchases.
So this is my second time watching this video. The first time I watched it, I spent the entire 16 minutes justifying why getting the Sette 270 was an optimal choice, especially since the Niche Zero has been completely out of stock and the heartache is too much to bare. And I gotta be honest, I was satisfied with putting the order it on Amazon. But then, magic happened. I RANDOMLY went on the website tonight (just a few minutes ago) and GAWD was looking out. Because there it was: US Niche Zero in white - AVAILABLE! I almost wasn't sure if I was seeing this correctly, but I was. So then, withOUT hesitation, I ordered it. Didn't care the cost, NOTHING! I wanted it, and it was mine for the TAKING! NOW, i'm watching this video a second time, and it's HITTING a little bit DIFFERENT! Now I'm over here like, "oh yeah, I'm about to be in the NZ gang....this is sweet." It's so odd how something sounds and how you feel when you get what you want. Thanks for your vids. Much appreciated. Can't WAIT to get my hands on this thing!
I continue to repair my Sette 30 with free parts from Baratza. It's nuts how many repairs and hours I have spent trouble shooting then contacting the friendly company. I am seriously liking and wanting the obvious reliability of the Niche
What about the eureka mignon manuale/notte? I heard thats a good entry level grinder just no extra features but its cheaper than the 270 if purchased from the right place...
Great of you to make a review. One point of feedback is that the first 2-3 minutes are spent purely on intro (which is fine) and then a long winded way of saying: These are the two grinders I will review. Might be a little better with a short and sweet intro or overview of the video content (such as timestamps for when you'll cover certain aspects of the comparison). Such a description of disposition would be more helpful for viewers I believe. Replacing all the "XYZ statement - we'll talk more about that later" with a clear disposition would both shorten the video and clarify the content.
Good video Kyle, I also have both purchasing the Niche zero when the Sette 270w died suddenly. The fabled Barattza service does not exist outside the US so it ended up being quite an expensive repair and I have not used it much since getting it back. I agree with your findings particularly on the subject
@Espresso Junky Please Elaborate! I really don't want buyer's remorse and the niche really seems to suit my exact needs most perfectly. Have you seen some issues with them? I'm really trying to convince myself to go Eureka mignon perfetto on the second hand market and just deal with the retention even though I intend to single dose with one of those etsy Hopper replacements. I want the versatility in one good unit to do a pour-over, brew a pot for company or pull a shot. I do understand it's very difficult to dual in your espresso with such a macro adjustment but it's more difficult to change Brew method with anything else in the Eureka line. Their Aesthetics, build quality, counter footprint (small space), availability of parts and quietness all attract me to Eureka.
same here.. while i like my sette 30 upgrade to 270 head, i get teh slip quite often and it was irritating as hell. i ended up ordering the niche awaiting delivery. i can't believe the sette is held together by the felt rope to prevent slip.. and at my area, sette 30 costedUSD320 + 80 for the W270 group-head and the Niche costed $700( total) There is no support for sette in my region even from authorise distributor. total bull!!!!!!
My choice a year ago came down to between these two, and I eventually went for the 270. Part of it was not wanting to wait months but also I didn't want the additional wait time to measure out my beans for every cup. I get through beans fast enough that the hopper is fine. Single-dosing doesn't work well because of popcorning. I've stripped it down for cleaning and it's well engineered.
Very interesting point on single dosing, I always single dose on the Sette 270 and seems to get very little popcorning compared to my Encore, it seems like the odd way the burrs are designed really sucks the beans down and through.
Probably buying myself a JX pro with the main purpose being pour over but also can definitely do espresso. That's my starting point. If I'm going to add to that down the road, is it worth adding a niche, or at that point since it's just espresso, do I just do the sette? Or honestly is the jx pro the best option regardless? Thank you!
The Niche is a buy once cry once grinder The Sette is a buy once cry everytime it breaks grinder. If you buy a sette just buy 2 of them so you’ll have 1 when the other sh!ts the bed.
The best comparison I have seen, the Sette 270. Its great grinder for starter home baristas, grinds consistency is the real issue and had it solved by replacing the Felt gasket part#058 and removing one shim to start espresso grinds from 4E losing 6 steps of fine grinds just to fix the drifting issue and vibration of the burrs while grinding. I agree to what you have said, however, the only thing is I don’t agree with is that the Niche can’t do well with brewing grinds. Its best made for espresso only. Thanks for the information.
Thanks for the response! And I have to respectfully disagree about the Niche and filter coffee. Only because I use the niche daily for all sorts of Filter brew methods. Others like James Hoffman do as well. But again I appreciate your response :)
hey, nice vid. Could you a comparison of the Sette 270 vs the Eureka Mignon Facile Espresso Grinder, they are the same price, was wondering which to lean to, which is a better value, better grinder
@@KyleRowsell Мне кажется нет ( в классическом понимании) . Мелкий помол да , однако в пудру нет . Решение за ручной кофемолкой типа sozen или более навороченных дивайсов .
I currently have the Breville Barista Express but I've always been using the built in grinder and happy with the result. Now im curious to see it elevated with a good grinder. I don't think the Niche is in my price range. People often say the Barista Express is the "best bang for the buck" in terms of quality and price...is there an equivalent grinder with this type of reputation? The go-to without being in the prosumer price range while still outperforming the built-in grinder of the Barista Express?
Have you tried the S2, formerly BG, burr for filter coffee? It seems like it could be a good solution to one grinder capable of both at a reasonable price point? I would be interested to see the performance of the grinder for other brew methods with this burr.
Great review! I just snaffled myself a Niche Zero, very very happy! I had a Baratza Virtuoso Preciso a few years ago. Great grind quality, but constantly breaking down, the plastic bush holding the upper burr kept cracking, then the motor burned out. But the Niche seems bullet proof, we’ll see how it goes for a few years!
Both nice neat grinders. But consider also I sourced a used spotless doser SuperJolly for half the price of the new Sette, cleaned it (was already clean anyway), put a Mini hopper on top of it and have been using this monster of dependability and consistency for years now. Tried it with a jam funnel covered with a pot pyrex lid , worked and looked great as well, all nice and chrome, stopped using it as I needed my funnel back. Last time I cleaned the SJ, last week , the original burrs were still sharp and espresso nice, rich and amazingly constant. Doser means a little action is needed to fill the portafilter after grinding, but no coffee mixing/declumping needed. Works great with both my Europiccola and my Oscar II.
This video popped up in my feed and decided to watch. Very good comparison of both of these machines. I've had my sette for a couple years now and have only had to replace the felt ring on the micro adjustment. Only complaint I could muster about it is the noise. It's loud. I will say though, the Niche has become more and more appealing as I keep hearing about it.
Actually, I prefer to have 2 grinders, one for espresso and the other for brew, because that allows me to use different types of beans dedicated for each coffee type.
baratza sette is user friendly, and is built to be replaceable right? The niche looks stepless, with one dial. I was considering getting the ascaso as a stepless grinder but i like the notches and dial markers the sette has. And yes I would have two seperate grinders, one for espresso dialing, and another for coarser grinds. It is annoying having to flip flop on one machine, especially if its stepless/no markers/indicators.
I don't think stepped or stepless is really a big deal, as long as you can make small enough adjustments (for espresso). The vario is a stepped grinder, but each step is such a tiny change, 1 micro step does hardly anything :) Good thing about the Vario is it doesn't have that overlap issue he mentioned here, if you go one macro (big) step it's equivalent to going from jumping one whole range on the micro adjustment knob. So If you're at the Macro setting #2 with the micro setting at it's highest / tightest grind and want to go finer, you just put the macro knob to #1 and the other to the coarsest setting and you should be about one step finer as desired. The Niche IS stepless but with numbers for indicating approximate grind size. (You'll need to rotate it all the way around to get to drip/brew coffee grind range though (some people make their own little arrow indicator for that on the other side of the adjustment thing).
Man now you have me second guessing myself. I wanted to upgrade my Encore to a Sette so I could have one grinder for espresso and filter, but it sounds like you are saying I’d be better off holding onto both? How much better is the Encore at filter than the Sette? Thanks as always I’m learning so much from you!
There is an additional thing to consider, and that is: availability. You can pretty much get a Sette all-year round, in a few days to a week in terms for delivery which is not the case for Niche.
Yeah, as I mention in the video it doesn’t go coarse enough filter coffee. And makes it tough to do certain brew methods without creating over extracted and bitter cups
Same here. Gets a lot of slack since you can't fine tune the grind size, but a lot of people miss the fact that you can dial in perfectly by just fine tuning by weight. Plus or minus a couple tenths of a gram and you're perfectly dialed in.
I like the look of the Niche Zero but I actually think the Baratza is more versitile for what I need. Even if price point isn’t an issue, it’s really hard to step up to the Niche Zero, especially also because it’s really hard to get right now!
I would buy the Niche Zero if I could. I'm not dropping $950 for a used one on eBay. If I could order either one at the prices you listed, Niche Zero... No contest. I'll probably get the Sette though as there are 9 retailers with stock today.
Nice vid Kyle! Question: $665 is the grinder’s price; what’s the total amount you end up paying after taxes and duty fees to have it delivered in Ontario
Hey, what about an excellent electric grinder for Aeropress / French press/ cold brew for home use? I am using a Hario slim manual grinder. But I know that it's a lack of consistency. Most RUclips reviews focus on espresso making. Thank you.
Considering picking up a niche to replace my drip grinder (ODE) or buying a second grinder for espresso. What do you recommend? Does the Niche preform well for both? Seems too good to be true...
Would be nice if Baratza started offering a small hopper/single dose version. I just don’t like the look of the large hopper and that’s keeping me from getting it lol
I like Nishe the best. I always make filter coffee and i have a Wilfa uniform that i am happy with, but i would like to have the Nishe zero if i would choose
Never tried the niche zero. I have had the baratza sette 270Wi for a year now. It does an awesome job. Consistent... Never disappoints. The absence of a doser makes sense for home use and makes it much easier to clean and maintain.
Nice video. Have you tried the course burrs on the sette? I’ve been using them for pour over for years and according to testing with my Kruve and purely based on taste it’s producing excellent results.
Maybe I missed it in the video, but how reliable has Niche proven to be? I mean you talk about losing your Sette for a week until it got serviced, I'm wondering if you have to send the Niche in you're going to be looking at a few months before you get that machine back. How is the Niche's warranty? Again I'm sorry if I missed it, was interrupted while watching the vid multiple times lol.
The niche uses a more robust motor and build design. While its not importable to break, my experience with the people at niche has been fantastic. And they have always helped when asked.
Just sold my Sette 270 after receiving my Niche Zero. I got to the point where I couldn't stand the loudness of the Sette when grinding - it's not just loud but very harsh sounding to my ears - it will definitely wake up the whole house (unless you live in a two-story house)! Also, I find that the useable range of settings for espresso on the Niche is much wider than that on the Sette.
Thanks for the vid! I’m in a similar situation now, with the Sette 270 and wondering if it’s worth the upgrade to the Niche. Really wished you’d have done a similar sifting test at the coarser settings to compare the two, as i’ve been super curious to see just how bad the Sette is for brew ;)
@@KyleRowsell interesting, I'd get the Niche but the wait time and the custom fees just doesn't seem worth it for now. My espresso budget sky rocketed from where I started, how naive I was going into it. I'm getting myself an espresso AScaso dream PID and wanted a sette 270 for espresso/pour over but I'm thinking I'm going to be doing mostly espresso because I like that foam. But was thinking of getting a Timemore Slim for pour over since I wouldn't be hand grinding every day. What do you think of that set up?
The niche can do French press, yes! But if that’s the only thing you’re brewing than maybe go for some bring designer for filter coffee. The Baratza encore could be a good option.
I’m very happy with my Niche Zero. I previously had a Baratza Virtuoso Preciso, and while I was reasonably happy with the grind quality, I was not happy with the constant cracking and need of replacing of the plastic bush that held the upper burr, until after a couple of years the motor failed and the thing became a doorstop.
Baratza has pretty good support and replacement part availability. Was replacing the broken parts not feasible? Very curious. I'm so tired of buying home appliances that last a few years and then when it breaks the "environmentally friendly ESG compliant company" wants you to fill up the landfill and buy a new product to line their pockets.
Thanks, Kyle for putting the time in for the comparison I've subscribed. Overall I liked what you shared and your best point in my opinion was at the very beginning. These grinders are for the home barista. Like with everything in life it seems there is always some sort of trade-off. When we all start chasing the idea of doing good espresso/lattes at home it's quickly pointed out how important having a go good grinder is. My journey started with the hand ROK grinder. Great quality grinds for a few $$$, but slow, static, kinda noisy, and everything else with the new learning curve "great grinds though". I believe a better comparison would have been the Sette 270Wi because it is closer in price to the Niche. The quality of grind seems to be almost a tie in your comparison, but with the Niche it seems to have a wider range of grinds. The additional features of the 270Wi I think should not be overlooked. Yes, the Sette is louder but it grinds so so much faster plus the Sette 270Wi will remove the step of weighing out your beans every time. Just like you've cited my 270Wi had some problems but Baratza took care of it with no push back. In fact, I can't even express enough how amazing Baratza customer support is. I've never come across a company that backs their product the way Baratza has, you can't put a price on this "truly amazing in this day and age". Would love to have a high-end commercial grinder at home... but like everything compromise and reality always at play.
Great review. Sub'd. I need an espresso grinder and I looked at both of them, kind of. I went with the 270wi. It's noisy, but that really doesn't matter to me, the performance and the features along with the lower price won my money. I've been using and will continue to use my 8 year old Breville smart grinder for filter coffee and the sette primarily for espresso. I'd be surprised if the baratza doesn't last as long as my Breville. The speed and accuracy of the sette are going to be awesome. I like the looks better as well. The nz is too pot like, and cartoonish to me....both are great grinders.
Definitely. It's what I call a "Buy one, buy none." Items, like most of what Mahlkonig (fun fact: it translates to Grind [Mahl] King [Konig]) makes, which means when you get it, you will likely not need to get any other grinder. But be warned, it is a commercially produced equipment, swings in quality from best to worst is quite drastic. Though if it is second hand, I can imagine it would have no major flaws. Even if a bit flawed, that isn't a major drawback, especially in the face of a ~€1000 discount.
For sound measurements in the future, the standard way to do it is to place the microphone 1 meter away, pointed at the device you’re re measuring, and leave it in a fixed position when performing the measurement.
Wow, congrats on your video. I'm looking for a new grinder and watched several reviews from the big million+ subscriber channels. None of them actually used a decibel meter or filtered the grinds like you did. Nice job.
Unless you have your heart set on a conical burr grinder the Baratza Vario can pretty much do it all. My last Vario was a coffee warrior for over 12 years, doing everything from French Press to Espresso. To me the big knock on Baratza is all of the plastic in their machines and aesthetically I personally don't find them visually striking. But they aren't priced like a Eureka Olympus either.
I use a lever espresso machine so the low rumble of the Niche Zero as it does its work matches my silent workflow. But the Specialita is nice too and I would consider it a viable alternative to the Niche Zero. IMHO.
I just got a 270wi. It seems to really save me a lot of tedium - but I'm not entirely sure I trust the scale. It's such a fast grinder it seems to over and under shoot the weight by a fair bit.
@@hasufinheltain1390 also the manual do say that after a few times the scale learns and make micro adjustments so the dose should get closer over time.
@@jonccwong Thanks! I'll check in the manual - I've literally had the thing for less than 48 hours, so I haven't dug into it yet. It has already resulted in me consuming what is surely an unhealthy amount of caffeine - I had been using an old hand-crank Turkish grinder and manually measuring so it's a huge difference in convenience.
I have a Sette 270wi and was really happy with the espresso it produces paired with my E61 heat exchanger espresso machine. But I have replaced two motor assemblies on the 270wi in 3 years. So I just ordered a Niche Zero and will be selling the Sette once it arrives. Kind of a shame because the Sette 270 could be a home run if they fixed the durability of the motor/gearbox assembly.
I have the Baratza Encore and it recently died. Bad motor windings and motor control board. I emailed Baratza and they are sending new parts for free. Great customer service. That said, while the Encore is down I ordered a ECM C-Manuale 54 and the difference is night and day. Superior build quality, all metal, very sturdy and very quiet. I’ll keep the Encore as a backup, but the ECM will be the grinder on my coffee station.
Interesting. I have the sette for about a year and brew with V60 and Chemex. I brew in the medium range of the grind size. What am I doing wrong here if the Sette cant do this? I am more worried if it can manage espresso if I ever want to go that way.
I think he just meant it's more inconsistent at that range and it's not optimal for it, maybe his grinder worked differently and yours gives good results. Compare with another grinder to see if you could be getting better results or if the sette is performing nicely for you at that grind range. But if you're happy with how it works that's good :)
The best part of the Sette is that you can buy it whenever you want and from wherever your heart desires.
Absolutely True
Yeah it's not a cult initiation to buy a Coffee grinder 💀
0:41: Intro
2:23: Specs comparison
4:40: List of Tests
5:04: Niche: Quick usage guide
5:42: Baratza: Quick usage guide
6:57: Word of caution with Baratza
8:04: Sifter Test
13:01: Taste Test
13:27: Final Comparision and Conclusion
Thanks!
@@KyleRowsell Hi Kyle, if you put this in your description (with 0:00: Start, too) it'll show up as chapters on your video, which I'm sure people would find useful :)
I admit the sette had some issues. I own one. I do have to say that Baratza customer support and commitment to improve the product is probably one of the best in the industry. They were extremely good shipping Me all upgraded parts with incredible clear work instructions. You don’t have to worry with this company.
I’m surprised to hear of the gearbox failures, mine is almost 7 years old but only probably ran 1.8 cups per day on average.
I’m replacing my gearbox hoping the new one is quieter, it is starting to sound a little clunky. The noise has always been the worst part of the machine and there isn’t much that can be done to dampen it.
I had the Sette 30 for a few months now. No problem and love the results! I had a Breville pro something grinder before. I had it for a few years. The Sette Up the game of my espresso sooo much!
Baratza sent me a new gearbox / motor assembly free of charge when mine broke. Excellent customer service.
Yes, their customer service is great.
This happens a lot with the Baratza...
I have the 270. They sell a different internal burr for filter coffee. It takes maybe 3 mins to swap. Works well for me since I do both espresso and filter depending on mood.
Yes, I am late to the party but I have watched this video a couple of times as well as your review of the Sette 30. I went with the Sette 30. Here is why. I got a great deal on a new 30 at $200. Ordered the BG burr, the Sette 270 Adjustment Assembly, an additional cone and the drop down portafilter fork for the 30. Ok, why did I do this? Here is the logic and setup. I put the BG burr in the original 30 assembly. Stuck the original espresso burr in the 270 assembly. Dialed in both, the 30 assembly for my pour over and the 270 assembly for my preferred bean and espresso grind. A simple 30 second swap of the assembly and I have the best of both worlds. $200 for the 30, $140 for the extras = dual machines for $340. I can easily pick up a spare gear assembly for $40 and literally never have to worry about downtime and still be under the price of the 270....
I've had my Sette 270Wi for more than a year and I have used it at least three times a day: 1X for drip brewing & 2X for making espresso. Haven't had a single problem.
What setting do you have for pour over? I had to install the shim for espresso, and haven’t dialed in for pour over yet
This is the first video of yours I've seen. You did a great job comparing these grinders, and I've subscribed to your channel. I pre-ordered the Sette 270 so I've had it for a long time. I considered pre-ordering the Niche when it was funding since it looks amazing, but ended up passing due to the cost.
I completely agree with your comments regarding the reliability of the Sette and Baratza's support. My gear box broke after 4 years of very light use and Baratza replaced it for free. I had other issues as well, which took over 70 emails over several months to diagnose and fix and turned out to be a faulty adjustment assembly, which Baratza also replaced for free.
Thanks for this response!
Love the Sette 270. I've had one now going on 3+ years with daily use. Yes, I had to replace the gears-free of charge from Baratza-and yes, it is LOUD in the still of the morning. BUT it does provide very consistent results for espresso, and does quite well for V60 pour-overs. For the money, a very good grinder with exceptional customer service.
Does anyone know if they improved the plastic gears that used to fail after 2 years?
Shipping gears to my country is expensive
@@isaacbugalho Just had mine fail after 2 yrs 2mos
@@booka62 just after warranty... Will they send spares to your country?
@@isaacbugalho Yes. I finally got it squared away. Was using my Hario hand crank with my Chemex while I waited for them to replace. Their CS email system took forever. Many emails back-and-forth and several reps later, I received my replacement part free of charge.
Sadly in 2022, here in Australia -- the Niche Zero is well over $1000 AUD on pre-order alone. Or buy it in stock from a reseller for $1700... but the 270 was $400 brand new and I got it immediately lol
I got the Niche about 6 months ago. I had to wait, but it arrived as predicted. I've had lower cost grinders before, but I don't think I'll ever need to upgrade now. It is a thing of beauty and very well made. I would say that this is a machine whereas the Sette is a kitchen appliance. Pay cheap, pay twice. Once you've come to terms with the cost, I don't hink you'll look back. Oh, and I emailed them and they answered my queries. One thing, which is really useful, the grind receptacle is the same size as a standard portafilter, so you just invert it - no mess. Very little static, easy to dose, the list goes on... Very happy with mine : )
Great feedback!
11:00-11:09 what do the "so's" indicate? Or what should we conclude as a result of this evidence?
I used sette 270 for pour over and it seemed fine. I am not sure why you said it can't
I had the Sette and now have the Niche, both are great in the cup but the reliability thus far and quietness of Niche is worth the extra money. The only thing I miss from the Sette is the speed it was about 4 seconds for a 18 gram dose where the Niche is more like 16. Nither are that long but once you get used to the 4 second grind time the longer grind time of the Niche is more noticeable.
Yes, the sette is a quick grinder!
If you're dosing into the cup though you can just let it run and do it's thing at least. Not sitting there holding a portafilter in your hand.
Decibels are a logarithmic unit of measure. 3db difference is twice the volume. Regarding the grind setting, it seems that if you adjusted the sette just a bit finer the result would be virtually the same as the niche.
3 dB is twice the sound energy, as in watts of amplifier power, NOT twice as loud. 10 db is twice the perceived volume (and 10 times the sound energy).
I don't think that app or phone mic is really accurate, the Niche is super quiet (probably quieter than the Specialita or about the same with a lower tone) from what I've heard the Sette is super loud (tone sounds bad too which is probably why people complain about the sound), I'd think the Niche should be a lot lower than what he measured.
So, how is Niche support? If availability is so limited, I would be concerned that support is a gamble?
Hi Kyle, great video. I use my sette 270 for making V60 and Chemex coffee al the time with good results, ratio 15g/250ml and grind settings between 16 -18. Why is the 270 not suitable?
I don't understand this either. I use mine for V60 too and it works Great! :)
Hi! Why do you say in the video that Sette can't be a grinder to filter coffee? It cannot reach coarse grind? Thank you.
I saw the Sette 270 at a local coffee event, picked it up, noticed how light it is (all that plastic, and the motor is obviously not very heavy) and moved on. I eventually purchased an all metal Eureka Mignon and use it for espresso single-dosing. I love its micro-adjustment feature for dialing in exactly what I want.
You’re missing out!
Wow, what an excellent video. One of the best reviews of any coffee product I've seen. I have the Sette 270 and the reviewer is spot on - my gearbox broke, but in my case the control panel broke twice - both times a little drop of water (washback from my steamer). All 3 times the supplier took care of it, but it's a few days without a grinder each time. Also, this thing is redicuoulsy LOUD! It's impossible to have a friend over and continue a conversation while this thing grinds. It's insane. My ears hurt every damn time and I've had it for 2 years now.
Hello Kyle, I would like to start by thanking you for your videos which allow us to make better purchasing decisions. I'm not sure if anyone asked the question (as I didn't have time to read all the reviews), but I would like to know which of the two grinders is the easier to maintain (cleaning the grinders and the grinding chamber).
I have owned the Baratza Sette 270 for three years (I make 2 to 3 espressos per day), and I have never had a problem with my grinder (I cross my fingers and touch wood). I'm about to turn 65, and I'm looking at Niche Zero for a birthday present, I just have to find a reason to spoil myself a little.
Thank you again for your involvement, it helps us to better choose our purchases.
So this is my second time watching this video. The first time I watched it, I spent the entire 16 minutes justifying why getting the Sette 270 was an optimal choice, especially since the Niche Zero has been completely out of stock and the heartache is too much to bare. And I gotta be honest, I was satisfied with putting the order it on Amazon. But then, magic happened. I RANDOMLY went on the website tonight (just a few minutes ago) and GAWD was looking out. Because there it was: US Niche Zero in white - AVAILABLE! I almost wasn't sure if I was seeing this correctly, but I was. So then, withOUT hesitation, I ordered it. Didn't care the cost, NOTHING! I wanted it, and it was mine for the TAKING! NOW, i'm watching this video a second time, and it's HITTING a little bit DIFFERENT! Now I'm over here like, "oh yeah, I'm about to be in the NZ gang....this is sweet." It's so odd how something sounds and how you feel when you get what you want. Thanks for your vids. Much appreciated. Can't WAIT to get my hands on this thing!
Hi Candis, how do you like the Niche Zero for espresso? Was it worth the wait and cost?
iHey Candis... it's been 6 months... are you still high? lol
@@chadgregory9037 so high
I continue to repair my Sette 30 with free parts from Baratza. It's nuts how many repairs and hours I have spent trouble shooting then contacting the friendly company. I am seriously liking and wanting the obvious reliability of the Niche
Thanks for the comparison ! You mentioned that the NZ can go down to Turkish. Can the Sette 270 grind for Turkish as well ?
i'd be interested to see the db scale with the hopper filled and lid closed. the way it is designed to be operated.
What about the eureka mignon manuale/notte? I heard thats a good entry level grinder just no extra features but its cheaper than the 270 if purchased from the right place...
This grinder handles more beans then other grinders I have used. Easy to clean
I just got a niche and a fellow ode with SSP sweet burrs. I love the niche a lot I'm going to start using the ode for filter soon.
Great of you to make a review. One point of feedback is that the first 2-3 minutes are spent purely on intro (which is fine) and then a long winded way of saying: These are the two grinders I will review.
Might be a little better with a short and sweet intro or overview of the video content (such as timestamps for when you'll cover certain aspects of the comparison). Such a description of disposition would be more helpful for viewers I believe.
Replacing all the "XYZ statement - we'll talk more about that later" with a clear disposition would both shorten the video and clarify the content.
Good video Kyle, I also have both purchasing the Niche zero when the Sette 270w died suddenly. The fabled Barattza service does not exist outside the US so it ended up being quite an expensive repair and I have not used it much since getting it back. I agree with your findings particularly on the subject
@Espresso Junky what do you suggest, Eureka?
@Espresso Junky Please Elaborate! I really don't want buyer's remorse and the niche really seems to suit my exact needs most perfectly. Have you seen some issues with them? I'm really trying to convince myself to go Eureka mignon perfetto on the second hand market and just deal with the retention even though I intend to single dose with one of those etsy Hopper replacements.
I want the versatility in one good unit to do a pour-over, brew a pot for company or pull a shot. I do understand it's very difficult to dual in your espresso with such a macro adjustment but it's more difficult to change Brew method with anything else in the Eureka line. Their Aesthetics, build quality, counter footprint (small space), availability of parts and quietness all attract me to Eureka.
same here.. while i like my sette 30 upgrade to 270 head, i get teh slip quite often and it was irritating as hell. i ended up ordering the niche awaiting delivery. i can't believe the sette is held together by the felt rope to prevent slip.. and at my area, sette 30 costedUSD320 + 80 for the W270 group-head and the Niche costed $700( total)
There is no support for sette in my region even from authorise distributor. total bull!!!!!!
what is currently the best electric (non USB) grinder under $200? 80% moka pot
thanks
There is a brew burr for the Sette 270 that only cost $25 that will allow you to grind for drip coffee
In my experience this burr doesn’t do exactly as advertised. It can still be tough to make filter coffee.
hmm what abt changing bur on the sette. they do have another bur for pour over
My choice a year ago came down to between these two, and I eventually went for the 270. Part of it was not wanting to wait months but also I didn't want the additional wait time to measure out my beans for every cup. I get through beans fast enough that the hopper is fine. Single-dosing doesn't work well because of popcorning. I've stripped it down for cleaning and it's well engineered.
Very interesting point on single dosing, I always single dose on the Sette 270 and seems to get very little popcorning compared to my Encore, it seems like the odd way the burrs are designed really sucks the beans down and through.
If you use the Sette 270w, you don’t need to single dose. I wish now I’d bought it.
Probably buying myself a JX pro with the main purpose being pour over but also can definitely do espresso. That's my starting point. If I'm going to add to that down the road, is it worth adding a niche, or at that point since it's just espresso, do I just do the sette? Or honestly is the jx pro the best option regardless? Thank you!
The Niche is a buy once cry once grinder
The Sette is a buy once cry everytime it breaks
grinder.
If you buy a sette just buy 2 of them so you’ll have 1 when the other sh!ts the bed.
Lol niche is twice the retail price as well.
The best comparison I have seen, the Sette 270. Its great grinder for starter home baristas, grinds consistency is the real issue and had it solved by replacing the Felt gasket part#058 and removing one shim to start espresso grinds from 4E losing 6 steps of fine grinds just to fix the drifting issue and vibration of the burrs while grinding.
I agree to what you have said, however, the only thing is I don’t agree with is that the Niche can’t do well with brewing grinds. Its best made for espresso only.
Thanks for the information.
Thanks for the response! And I have to respectfully disagree about the Niche and filter coffee. Only because I use the niche daily for all sorts of Filter brew methods. Others like James Hoffman do as well. But again I appreciate your response :)
Waiting for my Niche in February. Great review!
You’ll love it!
Lucky you....
hey, nice vid. Could you a comparison of the Sette 270 vs the Eureka Mignon Facile Espresso Grinder, they are the same price, was wondering which to lean to, which is a better value, better grinder
Can Sette going for turkish coffee?
Yes it can
@@KyleRowsell Мне кажется нет ( в классическом понимании) . Мелкий помол да , однако в пудру нет . Решение за ручной кофемолкой типа sozen или более навороченных дивайсов .
Just ordered the Niche in black a couple days ago. Now the wait begins, till it comes in February! So hyped!
Get ittttt
I currently have the Breville Barista Express but I've always been using the built in grinder and happy with the result. Now im curious to see it elevated with a good grinder. I don't think the Niche is in my price range.
People often say the Barista Express is the "best bang for the buck" in terms of quality and price...is there an equivalent grinder with this type of reputation? The go-to without being in the prosumer price range while still outperforming the built-in grinder of the Barista Express?
You’re likely looking at a hand grinder in that price range. Or, one of eureka’s new grinders.
@@KyleRowsell would a hand grinder be better than the built in breville built-in grinder?
Waiting to see a video like this and you just uploaded it today!
Perfect!
How is the Niche for french press?
Have you tried the S2, formerly BG, burr for filter coffee? It seems like it could be a good solution to one grinder capable of both at a reasonable price point? I would be interested to see the performance of the grinder for other brew methods with this burr.
Great review! I just snaffled myself a Niche Zero, very very happy! I had a Baratza Virtuoso Preciso a few years ago. Great grind quality, but constantly breaking down, the plastic bush holding the upper burr kept cracking, then the motor burned out. But the Niche seems bullet proof, we’ll see how it goes for a few years!
Both nice neat grinders. But consider also I sourced a used spotless doser SuperJolly for half the price of the new Sette, cleaned it (was already clean anyway), put a Mini hopper on top of it and have been using this monster of dependability and consistency for years now. Tried it with a jam funnel covered with a pot pyrex lid , worked and looked great as well, all nice and chrome, stopped using it as I needed my funnel back. Last time I cleaned the SJ, last week , the original burrs were still sharp and espresso nice, rich and amazingly constant. Doser means a little action is needed to fill the portafilter after grinding, but no coffee mixing/declumping needed. Works great with both my Europiccola and my Oscar II.
Thanks for your response!
This video popped up in my feed and decided to watch. Very good comparison of both of these machines. I've had my sette for a couple years now and have only had to replace the felt ring on the micro adjustment. Only complaint I could muster about it is the noise. It's loud.
I will say though, the Niche has become more and more appealing as I keep hearing about it.
Why isn’t my grind never the same with the sette? Every time I brew my coffee it’s too long in seconds or too short in brew seconds
Actually, I prefer to have 2 grinders, one for espresso and the other for brew, because that allows me to use different types of beans dedicated for each coffee type.
baratza sette is user friendly, and is built to be replaceable right? The niche looks stepless, with one dial. I was considering getting the ascaso as a stepless grinder but i like the notches and dial markers the sette has. And yes I would have two seperate grinders, one for espresso dialing, and another for coarser grinds. It is annoying having to flip flop on one machine, especially if its stepless/no markers/indicators.
I don't think stepped or stepless is really a big deal, as long as you can make small enough adjustments (for espresso). The vario is a stepped grinder, but each step is such a tiny change, 1 micro step does hardly anything :)
Good thing about the Vario is it doesn't have that overlap issue he mentioned here, if you go one macro (big) step it's equivalent to going from jumping one whole range on the micro adjustment knob. So If you're at the Macro setting #2 with the micro setting at it's highest / tightest grind and want to go finer, you just put the macro knob to #1 and the other to the coarsest setting and you should be about one step finer as desired.
The Niche IS stepless but with numbers for indicating approximate grind size. (You'll need to rotate it all the way around to get to drip/brew coffee grind range though (some people make their own little arrow indicator for that on the other side of the adjustment thing).
Are there any Niche alternatives that can do filter and espresso for less money?
Man now you have me second guessing myself. I wanted to upgrade my Encore to a Sette so I could have one grinder for espresso and filter, but it sounds like you are saying I’d be better off holding onto both? How much better is the Encore at filter than the Sette? Thanks as always I’m learning so much from you!
There is an additional thing to consider, and that is: availability. You can pretty much get a Sette all-year round, in a few days to a week in terms for delivery which is not the case for Niche.
Great point!
Can you explain WHY the Sette is not good for filter coffee?
Yeah, as I mention in the video it doesn’t go coarse enough filter coffee. And makes it tough to do certain brew methods without creating over extracted and bitter cups
Sette 30 was my first espresso grinder, really came through back then!
Nice
Same here. Gets a lot of slack since you can't fine tune the grind size, but a lot of people miss the fact that you can dial in perfectly by just fine tuning by weight. Plus or minus a couple tenths of a gram and you're perfectly dialed in.
@@johncharles2357 You can also just buy the 270 micro adjustment ring from baratza and mod the 30 to be a 270 (minus the programming options)
@@hittemni thanks for the tip! I am eyeing a 2nd hand 30 and this gives me an idea
Any videos on dialing in a Sette 270wi?
I have a tips on dialling in espresso! I think you’ll find the application applies to all grinders.
I own the Niche Zero. It rocks!!! Great video.
It does
Where can you order one?
@@himboslice_ link in the description
I like the look of the Niche Zero but I actually think the Baratza is more versitile for what I need. Even if price point isn’t an issue, it’s really hard to step up to the Niche Zero, especially also because it’s really hard to get right now!
"v60 all the way up to chemex"? holy sh. how coarse do you grind for chemex?
Where do you get the Niche Zero in Canada?
Wouldn't the Baratza Forte or Vario be a better point of comparison.
I would buy the Niche Zero if I could. I'm not dropping $950 for a used one on eBay. If I could order either one at the prices you listed, Niche Zero... No contest. I'll probably get the Sette though as there are 9 retailers with stock today.
Nice vid Kyle!
Question: $665 is the grinder’s price; what’s the total amount you end up paying after taxes and duty fees to have it delivered in Ontario
It cost me all tolled $1100 Canadian delivered to my door in Calgary. No provincial sales tax but maybe more for shipping. It came via Toronto.
This sounds accurate
@@duanestroeder8837 wow, you can almost buy another Niche with the amount you pay in taxes and fees 😱
@@JoseGabelaCuesta yes expensive - purchased April 20, 2020
Breakdown:
Niche 499.00 GBP
shipping 70.00 GBP
Converted to CAD 1025.30
Brokerage and GST CAD 124.61
Total CAD $1149.91
@@duanestroeder8837 way too crazy 😖!!
You should have covered the hopper on the Sette for the noise test, but over all good info.
Next time!
Hey, what about an excellent electric grinder for Aeropress / French press/ cold brew for home use?
I am using a Hario slim manual grinder. But I know that it's a lack of consistency. Most RUclips reviews focus on espresso making. Thank you.
Not an expert here, just another curious guy, but I think the Wilfa Uniform and the Baratza Encore are good options in the 200 to 300 USD range
Considering picking up a niche to replace my drip grinder (ODE) or buying a second grinder for espresso. What do you recommend? Does the Niche preform well for both? Seems too good to be true...
Would be nice if Baratza started offering a small hopper/single dose version. I just don’t like the look of the large hopper and that’s keeping me from getting it lol
I like Nishe the best. I always make filter coffee and i have a Wilfa uniform that i am happy with, but i would like to have the Nishe zero if i would choose
Never tried the niche zero. I have had the baratza sette 270Wi for a year now. It does an awesome job. Consistent... Never disappoints. The absence of a doser makes sense for home use and makes it much easier to clean and maintain.
Thanks for the response
I was thinking on purchase the Profitec Pro M54. What do you guys think of that one.?
Nice video. Have you tried the course burrs on the sette? I’ve been using them for pour over for years and according to testing with my Kruve and purely based on taste it’s producing excellent results.
How many grams at a time (ground) and what is the roast level of beans used?
Maybe I missed it in the video, but how reliable has Niche proven to be? I mean you talk about losing your Sette for a week until it got serviced, I'm wondering if you have to send the Niche in you're going to be looking at a few months before you get that machine back. How is the Niche's warranty? Again I'm sorry if I missed it, was interrupted while watching the vid multiple times lol.
The niche uses a more robust motor and build design. While its not importable to break, my experience with the people at niche has been fantastic. And they have always helped when asked.
@@KyleRowsell Cool! Thanks. If only it was a little easier to get one. I'll be patient :)
Love your enthusiasm. fun to watch!
Thanks!
Love your energy bro. Subscribed. Keep them coming.
Thank you!
Just sold my Sette 270 after receiving my Niche Zero. I got to the point where I couldn't stand the loudness of the Sette when grinding - it's not just loud but very harsh sounding to my ears - it will definitely wake up the whole house (unless you live in a two-story house)! Also, I find that the useable range of settings for espresso on the Niche is much wider than that on the Sette.
Thanks for the vid! I’m in a similar situation now, with the Sette 270 and wondering if it’s worth the upgrade to the Niche. Really wished you’d have done a similar sifting test at the coarser settings to compare the two, as i’ve been super curious to see just how bad the Sette is for brew ;)
Take my word, the sette isn’t good for brew methods. And I wasn’t trying to have a 20 min video where 10 minutes was sifting haha.
@@KyleRowsell interesting, I'd get the Niche but the wait time and the custom fees just doesn't seem worth it for now. My espresso budget sky rocketed from where I started, how naive I was going into it. I'm getting myself an espresso AScaso dream PID and wanted a sette 270 for espresso/pour over but I'm thinking I'm going to be doing mostly espresso because I like that foam. But was thinking of getting a Timemore Slim for pour over since I wouldn't be hand grinding every day. What do you think of that set up?
@@GadgetsGearCoffee the timemore is a hand grinder so if you’re interested in grinding by hand I think it’s a great option.
Did you try the drip burr that is available for the Sette?
Hi, that's make sense if I buy the niche for French press ?
The niche can do French press, yes! But if that’s the only thing you’re brewing than maybe go for some bring designer for filter coffee. The Baratza encore could be a good option.
@@KyleRowsell thank you for your answer.
I’m very happy with my Niche Zero. I previously had a Baratza Virtuoso Preciso, and while I was reasonably happy with the grind quality, I was not happy with the constant cracking and need of replacing of the plastic bush that held the upper burr, until after a couple of years the motor failed and the thing became a doorstop.
Baratza has pretty good support and replacement part availability. Was replacing the broken parts not feasible? Very curious. I'm so tired of buying home appliances that last a few years and then when it breaks the "environmentally friendly ESG compliant company" wants you to fill up the landfill and buy a new product to line their pockets.
Thanks, Kyle for putting the time in for the comparison I've subscribed. Overall I liked what you shared and your best point in my opinion was at the very beginning. These grinders are for the home barista.
Like with everything in life it seems there is always some sort of trade-off. When we all start chasing the idea of doing good espresso/lattes at home it's quickly pointed out how important having a go good grinder is. My journey started with the hand ROK grinder. Great quality grinds for a few $$$, but slow, static, kinda noisy, and everything else with the new learning curve "great grinds though".
I believe a better comparison would have been the Sette 270Wi because it is closer in price to the Niche. The quality of grind seems to be almost a tie in your comparison, but with the Niche it seems to have a wider range of grinds. The additional features of the 270Wi I think should not be overlooked. Yes, the Sette is louder but it grinds so so much faster plus the Sette 270Wi will remove the step of weighing out your beans every time. Just like you've cited my 270Wi had some problems but Baratza took care of it with no push back. In fact, I can't even express enough how amazing Baratza customer support is. I've never come across a company that backs their product the way Baratza has, you can't put a price on this "truly amazing in this day and age".
Would love to have a high-end commercial grinder at home... but like everything compromise and reality always at play.
The website for the Niche Zero says it's $89.99. This can't be correct, right?
That’s a scam. Don’t purchase from that site.
@@KyleRowsell Thanks!
Owner of the sette for 3 years now. No regrets, no problems so far.
Great review. Sub'd. I need an espresso grinder and I looked at both of them, kind of. I went with the 270wi. It's noisy, but that really doesn't matter to me, the performance and the features along with the lower price won my money. I've been using and will continue to use my 8 year old Breville smart grinder for filter coffee and the sette primarily for espresso. I'd be surprised if the baratza doesn't last as long as my Breville. The speed and accuracy of the sette are going to be awesome. I like the looks better as well. The nz is too pot like, and cartoonish to me....both are great grinders.
Great overview!
Where I live the niche is like 1200 because of tariffs
What's your opinion on teh EK43? I could buy one for 1700€ from an aquaintance. Is it worth the money for consumer use?
Definitely. It's what I call a "Buy one, buy none." Items, like most of what Mahlkonig (fun fact: it translates to Grind [Mahl] King [Konig]) makes, which means when you get it, you will likely not need to get any other grinder.
But be warned, it is a commercially produced equipment, swings in quality from best to worst is quite drastic. Though if it is second hand, I can imagine it would have no major flaws.
Even if a bit flawed, that isn't a major drawback, especially in the face of a ~€1000 discount.
You are a great presenter. Well done mate. Enjoyed this video thoroughly - binging the rest of your reviews. :) all the best for 2021
Thanks tak!
For sound measurements in the future, the standard way to do it is to place the microphone 1 meter away, pointed at the device you’re re measuring, and leave it in a fixed position when performing the measurement.
Fair enough
Is there any place selling the Niche in Canada or do we have to order it online?
Online is currently the only way to purchase.
Wow, congrats on your video. I'm looking for a new grinder and watched several reviews from the big million+ subscriber channels. None of them actually used a decibel meter or filtered the grinds like you did. Nice job.
Thanks!
Unless you have your heart set on a conical burr grinder the Baratza Vario can pretty much do it all. My last Vario was a coffee warrior for over 12 years, doing everything from French Press to Espresso. To me the big knock on Baratza is all of the plastic in their machines and aesthetically I personally don't find them visually striking. But they aren't priced like a Eureka Olympus either.
Also with the safety feature on the niche, you can't hot start the machine either without the top being close
I use a lever espresso machine so the low rumble of the Niche Zero as it does its work matches my silent workflow. But the Specialita is nice too and I would consider it a viable alternative to the Niche Zero. IMHO.
Thanks for the response! I cover the niche and the eureka in another video too.
@@KyleRowsell Right on! I'm going to watch it now! Love both of those grinders.
Sette is totally underrated. and the 270wi saves so much time (the weighing feature is so consistent)
It’s an excellent grinder!
I just got a 270wi. It seems to really save me a lot of tedium - but I'm not entirely sure I trust the scale. It's such a fast grinder it seems to over and under shoot the weight by a fair bit.
@@hasufinheltain1390 there’s a calibration mode so you can get a calibration weight. I’ve done it on mine and it’s pretty accurate
@@hasufinheltain1390 also the manual do say that after a few times the scale learns and make micro adjustments so the dose should get closer over time.
@@jonccwong Thanks! I'll check in the manual - I've literally had the thing for less than 48 hours, so I haven't dug into it yet.
It has already resulted in me consuming what is surely an unhealthy amount of caffeine - I had been using an old hand-crank Turkish grinder and manually measuring so it's a huge difference in convenience.
I have a Sette 270wi and was really happy with the espresso it produces paired with my E61 heat exchanger espresso machine. But I have replaced two motor assemblies on the 270wi in 3 years. So I just ordered a Niche Zero and will be selling the Sette once it arrives. Kind of a shame because the Sette 270 could be a home run if they fixed the durability of the motor/gearbox assembly.
I have the Baratza Encore and it recently died. Bad motor windings and motor control board. I emailed Baratza and they are sending new parts for free. Great customer service. That said, while the Encore is down I ordered a ECM C-Manuale 54 and the difference is night and day. Superior build quality, all metal, very sturdy and very quiet. I’ll keep the Encore as a backup, but the ECM will be the grinder on my coffee station.
Interesting. I have the sette for about a year and brew with V60 and Chemex. I brew in the medium range of the grind size. What am I doing wrong here if the Sette cant do this? I am more worried if it can manage espresso if I ever want to go that way.
I think he just meant it's more inconsistent at that range and it's not optimal for it, maybe his grinder worked differently and yours gives good results. Compare with another grinder to see if you could be getting better results or if the sette is performing nicely for you at that grind range. But if you're happy with how it works that's good :)
Very informative review, thank you!
270 sette for my espresso!!!! Love it!! Partner with baratza forte BG for my pour over!! Solid set up!!