The Brutal Truth About the Lagom P100: Engineering Excellence or User Experience Oversight?
Navigating the High-Stakes World of 98mm Grinders
In the stratosphere of specialty coffee, the
The Design Dilemma: Form Over Function
The P100 is an undeniably sturdy piece of equipment, but several design choices feel like unnecessary friction. The flat adjustment dial is a prime example. Because the dial sits horizontally on top of the machine, you cannot see the grind setting markers while standing in front of it. This forces a physical dance or the addition of unsightly aftermarket stickers just to know where your zero point lies.
Furthermore, the "Magic Tumbler" and its accompanying forks are a source of constant frustration. The original forks lack sufficient depth, making it easy for a portafilter to vibrate off during operation. Even with the magnetic attachment, the tumbler often fails to seat securely, leading to spills that can mar your countertop. These aren't just nitpicks; they are fundamental workflow interruptions in a machine that costs as much as a used car. The inclusion of a WDT tool with needles thicker than a human pinky further suggests that while the internal engineering is sound, the accessory package and external ergonomics were an afterthought.
Internal Engineering and the Regrinding Theory
Inside the chassis, the P100 boasts an overbuilt motor that will never stall, even at its lowest 200 RPM setting. The tolerances are incredibly tight—so tight, in fact, that swapping out the massive
Experimentation shows a significant retention issue during the grind cycle. When grinding 20 grams at a lower RPM, roughly 5 grams of coffee often remain trapped in the burr chamber until the machine ramps up to its "purge" speed (approximately 1,700 RPM). This delay suggests that grounds are being reground within the chamber before exiting, which negatively impacts particle distribution and clarity. When compared side-by-side with an
Performance Comparison: P100 vs. The Field
When evaluating the P100 against its peers, the value proposition becomes a game of trade-offs. The
Conversely, the
Final Verdict: Is It Right For Your Countertop?
The

Fancy watching it?
Watch the full video and context