Not at all, in fact it's a dream for home use. I had one in my home kitchen for a few months and thourougly enjoyed it. I almost never adjusted the grind or bothered to purge much coffee and got great results.
@@rjejames28 I bring equipment home from work to test, so my espresso setup rotates. If I were to purchase my own equipment, the GbW or a single dose grinder like the Lagom P64 would be among my top choices. -Ryan
Hey Aesop, that kind of depends on how much coffee you are going through daily. If you are only brewing for yourself and maybe one other person then the P64 is a great option. If you are doing much higher volume then E65s would be a pricey, but really high quality grinder for a home set up.
@@primacoffeeequipment probably just 3-5shots a day but if I can get them around the same price then would you recommend the p64 or e65s? Just the overall recommendation
That's a hard choice. Honestly, either one is going to be fantastic. For home use, the P64 is a little quieter and has a smaller footprint. So that might be my choice.
yes, after i bought the E65 GbW i found out that the grinder was too tall for my kitchen counter, couldn't open the hopper :D i bought the small hopper which is 250 g for around 130 euro. Regarding your second question: i do not know how loud is the Ceado E37S grinder but i can tell you that the E65 GbW is pretty silent. In fact it is one of the silent grinders that i've owned.
There's always something satisfying about thoughtful and quality engineering.
WHAT A COFFEE GRINDER SHOULD BE
Do you think it’s an overkill for home use ?
Not at all, in fact it's a dream for home use. I had one in my home kitchen for a few months and thourougly enjoyed it. I almost never adjusted the grind or bothered to purge much coffee and got great results.
@@primacoffeeequipmentthen what did you get after this ???
@@rjejames28 I bring equipment home from work to test, so my espresso setup rotates. If I were to purchase my own equipment, the GbW or a single dose grinder like the Lagom P64 would be among my top choices. -Ryan
ID on that espresso machine in the thumbnail?
That is the El Rocio Ragen, a machine we're currently testing.
@@primacoffeeequipment looks amazing! If you need anyone else to test it, I'm your guy ;)
@@primacoffeeequipment So, what are your thoughts on the El Rocio Ragen?
@@NANA-gy7yx Not great from a UI perspective, but its a solidly built machine.
Hi thank you for your content, for a home set up, do you recommend the Lagom p64 or the Mahlkonig E65s? or should I just go up to the P100 Lagom?
Hey Aesop, that kind of depends on how much coffee you are going through daily. If you are only brewing for yourself and maybe one other person then the P64 is a great option. If you are doing much higher volume then E65s would be a pricey, but really high quality grinder for a home set up.
@@primacoffeeequipment probably just 3-5shots a day but if I can get them around the same price then would you recommend the p64 or e65s? Just the overall recommendation
Thank you for the reply!!
That's a hard choice. Honestly, either one is going to be fantastic. For home use, the P64 is a little quieter and has a smaller footprint. So that might be my choice.
@@primacoffeeequipment thank you
Is there an option to add a smaller hopper?
Also, how laud it is, please? Compared to Ceado E37S as example.
yes, after i bought the E65 GbW i found out that the grinder was too tall for my kitchen counter, couldn't open the hopper :D
i bought the small hopper which is 250 g for around 130 euro.
Regarding your second question: i do not know how loud is the Ceado E37S grinder but i can tell you that the E65 GbW is pretty silent. In fact it is one of the silent grinders that i've owned.