Breaking the Manual Espresso Monopoly For years, the Flair 58 has stood as the undisputed champion of manual espresso. It offered enthusiasts a path to professional-grade pressure profiling without the five-figure price tag of a commercial machine. However, the market recently shifted. The Alm Kopi, a formidable direct lever machine, has emerged to challenge that dominance. This isn't just another budget alternative; it is a precision-engineered tool that addresses several long-standing gripes manual brewers have voiced for years. Precision Temperature Control and Group Heating The most significant advantage the Alm Kopi holds over its rivals is the integration of a PID controller for active group heating. While the Flair 58 uses three broad heat settings that tend to oscillate, the Alm Kopi allows for granular, degree-by-degree adjustments. This level of control is vital for those brewing ultra-light roasts that require high, stable temperatures to prevent sourness. The machine utilizes a thermal probe that reads the internal temperature of the brew chamber. Although there is a slight offset between the PID box reading and the actual water temperature, the stability it provides allows for repeatable, high-quality extractions that were previously difficult to achieve on a manual setup. Mechanical Design and Workflow The build quality leans heavily into stainless steel, providing a rigidity that many aluminum-framed machines lack. One standout feature is the internal ball joint on the piston. This allows for a wider range of motion without the piston needing to stay perfectly perpendicular, which in turn facilitates a massive chamber capacity. Users can comfortably push 110 to 120 grams of water through the puck, making it one of the few manual machines capable of pulling high-ratio "Allong
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