The Quest for the Perfect Extraction When the Timemore 078 first landed, it sent shockwaves through the coffee community. Its proprietary **Turbo burrs** offered a filter coffee profile that punched significantly above its weight class, rivaling machines twice its price. However, the tech-obsessed segment of the market rarely stays satisfied with stock equipment. Owners began clamoring for high-end replacements that could bridge the gap between world-class filter coffee and modern espresso. This led to a high-stakes showdown between the original Turbo burrs, the premium SSP Multi-Purpose, and the budget-conscious newcomer LeBrew. Upgrading a grinder's burr set is the ultimate "internal" tech mod. It is not about aesthetics or user interface; it is about the physical geometry of steel and how it shears organic matter. Choosing between a $350 SSP set and a $180 LeBrew set requires more than just looking at a price tag. It requires an understanding of how pre-breaker angles and finishing teeth dictate the clarity of your morning brew. Geometry and Technical Execution The technical differences between these burr sets are subtle but yield massive impacts on the final cup. The LeBrew geometry features 16 pre-breakers at a shallow angle, creating an aggressive feed rate. This aggressive design tends to produce a higher volume of fines—micro-particles that can muddy the flavor profile and slow down water flow during the brewing process. In contrast, the SSP Multi-Purpose uses 14 pre-breakers with a steeper angle, forcing a slower, more controlled feed into the secondary cutting phase. Manufacturing tolerances also play a critical role. While the Timemore 078 chassis itself shows impressive alignment—often within plus or minus 2 microns of run-out—the burrs themselves must be perfectly seated. The LeBrew sets occasionally suffer from minor manufacturing quirks, such as a gram of retention building up behind the fixed burr due to thickness inconsistencies. These technical minutiae are what separate a "good" grinder from a precision instrument. The Filter Coffee Experience In repeated blind testing against a high-end benchmark like the Option-O EG-1 with ULF burrs, the results were surprising. The original Turbo burrs remain the king of filter coffee for the Timemore platform. They provide a bright, transparent acidity that neither the SSP nor the LeBrew could quite replicate. The Turbo profile is vibrant and "incisive," offering a sweetness that feels integrated rather than forced. When comparing the third-party options, the SSP Multi-Purpose clearly outshone the LeBrew. The LeBrew cups often felt muted or muddled, lacking the structured acidity and layered complexity found in the SSP or ULF extractions. The SSP sets required significant "seasoning"—nearly 8 kilos of coffee—before they reached their peak performance, but once settled, they offered a cleaner, more floral cup than their cheaper Chinese counterparts. Espresso Performance and Versatility The primary reason to abandon the Turbo burrs is their inability to grind fine enough for espresso. For users who want a true "all-rounder," the SSP Multi-Purpose is the superior choice. It manages modern, fast-flow espresso shots with impressive balance, avoiding the harsh, astringent finish that frequently plagued the LeBrew shots. Interestingly, the LeBrew burrs do not represent a significant enough upgrade over the stock Timemore 078S espresso burrs to justify the labor of a swap. If your workflow is 70% espresso, the SSP upgrade is a justifiable investment in clarity. However, if you are looking for traditional, thick, chocolatey Neapolitan shots, none of these high-clarity flat burrs will satisfy you. They are designed for the "modern" palate: high acidity, low body, and maximum fruit notes. The Final Verdict Tech upgrades are only valuable if they solve a specific problem. If you primarily drink light-roast filter coffee, the stock Turbo burrs remain the best-in-class option. They are a marvel of consumer tech engineering that Timemore got right the first time. For the power user who demands one machine that does everything, the SSP Multi-Purpose is the winner. While the $350 price tag is steep, the LeBrew alternative fails to provide the same level of transparency and build quality. In the world of high-end coffee, you usually get exactly what you pay for in the geometry of the steel.
Hansung
People
- Jan 24, 2025
- Apr 12, 2023