MacGyver is Alive and Well

Brewing at Home and on the Road with Justin Pierce

In this series, we ask coffee professionals how they like to drink their coffee while at home and when traveling. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Feature photo courtesy of Justin Pierce Coffee professionals tend to spend most of their days brewing coffee. Baristas brew coffee behind the bar for their customers. Roasters brew it to […]


Torr Launches the Hive Cafe Countertop Coffee Concentrate System

Commercial cold coffee equipment company Torr Industries recently rolled out a countertop-friendly version of its signature Hive Brew cold coffee system, called the Hive Cafe. The northern California coffee company…


Coffee News Recap, 20 Jan: Last chance to apply for PRF El Salvador Mayorga Scholarship and volunteer positions, World of Coffee Dubai attracts more than 12,000 visitors & other stories

Every Friday, Perfect Daily Grind rounds up the top coffee industry news from the previous week. Here are this week’s stories. Mon, 16 Jan World of Coffee Dubai 2023 attracts more than 12,000 visitors from 48 countries. The event, which was held at the Dubai World Trade Centre, also included over 180 exhibitors and 36 […]


Test Drive: Update Your Grinding With More Comandante Grinder Accessories

The popular hand grinder has more to offer with a new line of tools and accessories now available. BY TANYA NANETTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Feature photo by Tanya Nanetti To brew the perfect cup of coffee, it’s important to choose the right coffee equipment. One essential is a reliable coffee grinder. Most coffee lovers start with a […]

MacGyver is Alive and Well

Weekly Coffee News: EUDR and Africa + More Celebrity Coffee

Welcome to DCN’s Weekly Coffee News. Keep up with all the latest coffee industry stories and career opportunities by subscribing to DCN’s newsletter. Tell our editors about your news here. Report: Small-Scale Farmers in…


5 Cool Cafés Worth a Try in Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai, one of Thailand’s most fascinating cities, is home to a vibrant specialty-coffee scene, with many cafés and roasteriess often offering locally grown coffee. BY TANYA NANETTI SENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Featured photo by Tim Durgan via Unsplash With a population of 3 million, Chiang Mai is a little (by Asian standards) gem in northern […]


A Look at Digital Coffee Future’s Digital Origin Education Program

The new program connects coffee producers to one another, provides them with educational resources, and more. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of the Cocaerol, Comal & Amprocal cooperatives in Honduras Since 2021, Digital Coffee Future (DCF) has been working on a digital training program to address the needs of coffee producers. In September […]


A Look at Digital Coffee Future’s Digital Origin Education Program

The new program connects coffee producers to one another, provides them with educational resources, and more. BY VASILEIA FANARIOTISENIOR ONLINE CORRESPONDENT Photos courtesy of the Cocaerol, Comal & Amprocal cooperatives in Honduras Since 2021, Digital Coffee Future (DCF) has been working on a digital training program to address the needs of coffee producers. In September […]

MacGyver is Alive and Well

MacGyver is Alive and Well

minimum dose size?

I use the Hario switch to brew my coffee and am trying to reduce my caffeine consumption. Hence I would like to brew smaller cups of coffee. I am currently using 10g of coffee with 160g of water. (1:16 Ratio) I am wondering if there is a minimum amount of coffee...

MacGyver is Alive and Well

I’ve had access to an old Probat electric sample roaster recently at a friend’s roastery. The machine is a bit of a dinosaur, and needed some serious MacGyer-ing (if you don’t know MacGyver, look him up; you’re in for a treat.)

Hundreds or thousands of roasters and importers use a version of this machine (and similar dinosaurs) to roast samples. While I’ve had delicious coffee from these machines, I’ve always been suspicious of their consistency. Now that I have had my hands on one of these machines for a few days, I’m certain: it’s impossible to roast consistently on these machines with their standard design. That is obvious from both the data and cupping results. 

Those using these machines in their green-buying process need to be concerned that they may often reject coffees due to unrecognized roast issues. If you’re using one of these machines and not noticing their wild inconsistency, I implore you to roast 10 batches of the same coffee on one of these machines, and to cup the coffees blindly. Unless you’re roasting the s**t out of your coffees, the differences between batches should be obvious.

These machines have a several design problems: 

• The electric heating elements have high latency and lack precision control.

• The airflow cannot be controlled with precision.

• The small outlet for exhaust air from the drum gets clogged with chaff easily and often.

• The standard temperature probe is poorly positioned and very slow.

• The barrels affect each other’s performance

I’d like to discuss how we tackled these problems to modernize the roaster and have a fighting chance at quality, consistent roasts.

Key:
Dark green circle: Analog temperature probe.

Purple: our MacGyver’d probe and clip

Blue: Wattage meter

Bright green: Airflow knob

Red: Power dial

The electric heating elements have very high latency and lack precision control

What this means is that when you increase or decrease the power setting, the heating elements heat or cool slowly. How slow is slow? Very slow. Here’s an example below.  This is between batches, empty drum, raising the power from 250 watts to 600 watts (the maximum is 880w). Note that it took more than one minute for the BT to begin to rise!

The power settings are controlled with a simple dial, as seen in the photo above (red circle). That dial offers little precision, as we learned when we plugged the machine into a wattage meter. 

The airflow cannot be controlled with precision. 

The airflow control is a small knob (bright green circle, above) one pulls out (increase) or pushes in (decrease) to adjust the airflow. For reference, the difference between insufficient airflow and excessive airflow is less than 2cm on the knob. Even a 1mm adjustment in the knob has a significant effect on airflow.

The small outlet for exhaust air from the drum gets easily clogged with chaff. 

On the back of the machine is a narrow grate, with a 2cm square hole, where the air gets sucked out of the roaster. Unless one shifts to high airflow late in a roast, chaff builds up and partially blocks the hole, decreasing the airflow. Unfortunately, moving the airflow knob during roasting is risky, given that there is no way to adjust it precisely or consistently.

Not only that, but those without proper data logging may not notice the profound effect of shifting airflow. Below we increased the airflow at approximately 1:50. When you see a shift in data like that, it’s difficult to know what is really happening. My goal with this machine is to avoid changing the airflow at all costs.

Our solution to the airflow problem was a combination of “set it and forget it” and measuring the airflow with an anemometer (blue circle), a device that measures wind speed (which is different from airflow; windspeed is m/s, airflow is m^3/s.) With a reasonably precise anemometer, we are able to reset the air level with consistency.

Measuring air speed

The standard temperature probe is poorly positioned and very slow. 

The stock temperature probe is in the back of the drum, and meant to measure environmental temperature rather than bean temperature. The probe is very slow and feeds to a mostly-useless analog gauge that changes temperature at a snail’s pace. Let’s just say one should not roast by ET alone, and analog gauges and roasting without proper BT data are very 1920s. I’m pretty sure none of us want to drink coffee the way it was roasted in the 1920s.
Our solution was to mount a clip on the front of the machine to hold and guide a 2mm BT probe in the optimal location.

The barrels affect each other’s performance

While this machine is a two-barrel roaster, the barrels share the same exhaust fan and duct and cannot be used simultaneously without affecting each other. If you desire precise, predictable results, this is effectively a single-barrel roaster.  

The results

After our MacGyver’ing, the roasts are more consistent, though not up to modern standards. At least now the machine won’t ruin many samples. We haven’t addressed the high latency of the heating elements, so that will impair precision. It is still challenging to prevent the chaff from sometimes clogging the exhaust port, but we can live with that for the moment.

Late edit: We have attached digital manometer to the machine to have continual air-pressure readings, so we’ll know immediately if the exhaust duct is slowly clogging.

Thanks for reading

Thanks to Mark Benedetto for doing most of the hard work, and to Vajra Rich and Boxcar Coffee for the help and hospitality!

Shopping cart0
There are no products in the cart!
Continue shopping
0