I'm new to this industry , if we look and search internet we can find information about almost everything but which machine water filters to use in driping and which to use in espresso is hard to find even if we know the parameters we looking in the water.
I would like to have more information to protect my espresso machine and get the most out of coffee

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It often depends on the water you start with. I have found the the water quality should be the  same for both espresso and drip. You can allow some minerals throug and still protect your equipment.

Yes it is hard to find recommendations for what to use, because it varies greatly depending on what you start with. You ought to filter and soften your espresso machine water. You ought to filter your drip machine water. If it's really bad you need something more. The SCAA and machine manufacturers have detailed recommendations, which differ from drip to espresso (espresso machines like much lower TDS than drip).

I have found that right around 150 PPM is perfect for for both espresso and drip. I service about 60% coffee shops and they all seem to love that formula; some a little lower, never higher. 

Assuming of course that hardness for espresso is below the machine manufacturer's recommendation... and that the PPM are the right mix of minerals.

Unless you aren't really worried about warranty coverage.


Tom Schimmel said:

I have found that right around 150 PPM is perfect for for both espresso and drip. I service about 60% coffee shops and they all seem to love that formula; some a little lower, never higher. 

I am in a similar situation and have done a lot of reading and searching. Our water at our location is pretty good, so I am just installing a dual-purpose filter for odor and taste. The filter I found seems pretty good in concept (3M CUNY DP290), it has two outlets, one for drinking water, and one for machines with a scale inhibitor. So, I will use it to serve our Brewer, Espresso Machine, Ice Maker, and Soda Fountain. This model is rated @ 10 gpm. 

*updated for new model info

When you say your water is "Good" what does that mean?  Do you have a water test for your site with some metrics?  

That Cuno systems is expensive to service.  Uses proprietary cartridges that cost 10 times  more then comparable standard 2.5 x 20 filter media. Actually, the whole thing is expensive, over $700. Depending on the quality of your water, the Cuno system may have to be serviced up to once a month - that's $300 a month just for water filtration.  Those "Scale inhibitor" cartridges are $30+ a pop, way more then salt for a softener.  And acomplete waste if you don't need to soften your water.  Get a test and find out.    



Rod Gwinn said:

I am in a similar situation and have done a lot of reading and searching. Our water at our location is pretty good, so I am just installing a dual-purpose filter for odor and taste. The filter I found seems pretty good in concept (3M CUNY DP290), it has two outlets, one for drinking water, and one for machines with a scale inhibitor. So, I will use it to serve our Brewer, Espresso Machine, Ice Maker, and Soda Fountain. This model is rated @ 10 gpm. 

*updated for new model info

Thanks Scott, very good advice. I did a simple water test, but I have not done a hardness test. I will get that done before I purchase any filtration devices. And thanks for your feedback on the Cuno system, I was thinking of a 6 month duration on the filters. 

I appreciate your feedback, and I did not mean to mis-lead any fellow members. 

Rod



Scott said:

When you say your water is "Good" what does that mean?  Do you have a water test for your site with some metrics?  

That Cuno systems is expensive to service.  Uses proprietary cartridges that cost 10 times  more then comparable standard 2.5 x 20 filter media. Actually, the whole thing is expensive, over $700. Depending on the quality of your water, the Cuno system may have to be serviced up to once a month - that's $300 a month just for water filtration.  Those "Scale inhibitor" cartridges are $30+ a pop, way more then salt for a softener.  And acomplete waste if you don't need to soften your water.  Get a test and find out.    



Rod Gwinn said:

I am in a similar situation and have done a lot of reading and searching. Our water at our location is pretty good, so I am just installing a dual-purpose filter for odor and taste. The filter I found seems pretty good in concept (3M CUNY DP290), it has two outlets, one for drinking water, and one for machines with a scale inhibitor. So, I will use it to serve our Brewer, Espresso Machine, Ice Maker, and Soda Fountain. This model is rated @ 10 gpm. 

*updated for new model info

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