Our Valued Sponsor
OpinionsConsumer ReviewsGuides and How TosCoffeeGeek ReviewsResourcesForums
Espresso: Espresso Machines
Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
Rancilio Silvia - How to
Step by step guide for easy brewing and steaming with the Rancilio Silvia
www.seattlecoffeegear.com
 
Not Logged in: Log In to Postlog in
New Topics updated topics   New Posts new posts   Unanswered Posts new unanswered  
Search Discussion Board search   Discussion Board FAQ faq   Signup sign up  
Discussions > Espresso > Machines > Crossland Coffee...  
view previous topic | view next topic | view all topics
showing page 6 of 7 first page | last page previous page | next page
Author Messages
JeffPersson
Senior Member
JeffPersson
Joined: 11 May 2008
Posts: 268
Location: Goodyear, AZ
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Mini Vivaldi II & TWIST v2
Grinder: SM90, Preciso, Porlex, PeDe...
Vac Pot: Yama 8-cup
Drip: trifectaMB, HG, Chemex...
Roaster: Behmor 1600
Posted Sun Jun 12, 2011, 10:54pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

Dario_R Said:

This machine has a boiler for espresso and the runs water from the boiler through a thermoblock to make steam, is this correct? Or does it run cold water through the thermoblock to make steam?

Posted June 12, 2011 link

The thermoblock is fed with 200° water from the boiler.

Dario_R Said:

If the latter in #1, that means you cannot steam milk while making espresso, correct? If I steamed milk first would I then have to wait for the water to come back up to temp for my espresso shot? If so is the difference between this and an SBDU that it has shorter wait time. Or am I wrong and there is no wait time? No criticism implied - just seeking to understand.

Posted June 12, 2011 link

You cannot steam milk while the shot is being pulled, because you have to select which mode (brew v steam) the machine is in.

 
My wife plans to sign me up for the first season of Coffee Gadget Hoarders.
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
Dario_R
Senior Member


Joined: 15 May 2011
Posts: 20
Location: Portland, OR
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Astra Pro
Grinder: Baratza Vario
Posted Tue Jun 14, 2011, 11:05am
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

JeffPersson Said:

You cannot steam milk while the shot is being pulled, because you have to select which mode (brew v steam) the machine is in.

Posted June 12, 2011 link

So the advantage of this over a good SBDU machine is primarily the PID?
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
EricBNC
Senior Member
EricBNC
Joined: 22 Jun 2010
Posts: 1,756
Location: North Carolina
Expertise: Just starting

Espresso: QM Silvano, LP Stradivarius,...
Grinder: K30, Preciso, Pharos, KA...
Vac Pot: Sunbeam C30, Bodum Santos...
Drip: Bonavita BV-1800,...
Roaster: Behmor, Melitta, Fresh...
Posted Tue Jun 14, 2011, 4:36pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

Dario_R Said:

So the advantage of this over a good SBDU machine is primarily the PID?

Posted June 14, 2011 link

The steam thermoblock drawing from the boiler instead of the cold water tank seems innovative and should speed up the steaming process - I would consider this another advantage.

 
I chew coffee beans with my teeth while gargling with 195 F water to enjoy coffee. What is this "coffee brewing" device you speak of?
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
frcn
Senior Member
frcn
Joined: 23 Dec 2001
Posts: 2,925
Location: Northern California
Expertise: I live coffee

Espresso: Vibiemme Domobar Double
Grinder: Mazzer Kony, Baratza...
Vac Pot: Hario, 2 Cory pots, 1 Cory...
Drip: Behmor Brazen, Bunn A10 mod...
Roaster: computer controlled Hottop,...
Posted Tue Jun 14, 2011, 5:09pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

Dario_R Said:

So the advantage of this over a good SBDU machine is primarily the PID?

Posted June 14, 2011 link

It is a single, 500ml stainless steel brew boiler with PID temperature control, but it also has programmable pre-infusion which is programmable for length of time, and the "dwell time" between pre-infusion and extraction is also programmable. Extraction time is also programmable.
If the steam function works as well as it seemed to at the show (no milk- just steam blast to view when I was there) then I think it is a good step above a SBDU with added PID.

 
Visit My Website
www.EspressoMyEspresso.com
back to top
 View Profile Visit website Link to this post
Dario_R
Senior Member


Joined: 15 May 2011
Posts: 20
Location: Portland, OR
Expertise: I love coffee

Espresso: Astra Pro
Grinder: Baratza Vario
Posted Tue Jun 14, 2011, 5:31pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

EricBNC Said:

The steam thermoblock drawing from the boiler instead of the cold water tank seems innovative and should speed up the steaming process - I would consider this another advantage.

Posted June 14, 2011 link

Make sense. I'd like to see them side by side.

EricBNC Said:

The steam thermoblock drawing from the boiler instead of the cold water tank seems innovative and should speed up the steaming process - I would consider this another advantage.

Posted June 14, 2011 link

Agreed- the programmable features look quite good.
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
EricBNC
Senior Member
EricBNC
Joined: 22 Jun 2010
Posts: 1,756
Location: North Carolina
Expertise: Just starting

Espresso: QM Silvano, LP Stradivarius,...
Grinder: K30, Preciso, Pharos, KA...
Vac Pot: Sunbeam C30, Bodum Santos...
Drip: Bonavita BV-1800,...
Roaster: Behmor, Melitta, Fresh...
Posted Tue Aug 16, 2011, 8:52pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

So, any early adopters yet here on coffeegeek?

 
I chew coffee beans with my teeth while gargling with 195 F water to enjoy coffee. What is this "coffee brewing" device you speak of?
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
calblacksmith
Moderator
calblacksmith
Joined: 25 Nov 2007
Posts: 5,685
Location: Riverside, Ca, U.S.A.
Expertise: I live coffee

Espresso: ECM Veneziano A1
Grinder: Many different commercial
Vac Pot: 40s era Silex
Drip: Milita, Bunn&Curtis...
Roaster: Cast iron pan, gas burner
Posted Wed Aug 17, 2011, 6:46am
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

Well, yes there is, a few weeks back, a new member posted that he (she? I don't remember) bought a CC1 as a first machine along with grinder etc. I have not seen a post from them but I think once they get it or get to working it, they likely will post again.

 
In real life, my name is
Wayne P.

Feed the newbs, starve the trolls and above all enjoy what you drink!
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
uglykidwen
Senior Member


Joined: 22 Sep 2011
Posts: 10
Location: Townsville, QLD. AU
Expertise: I love coffee

Posted Thu Sep 22, 2011, 10:48pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

chasemonster Said:

Personally, I'd rather have both.

Posted June 2, 2011 link

Personally, I agree with you. I would like to have a pressure gauge too.
There is a Taiwanese connoisseur mod one by himself.

http://ppk10559.blog131.fc2.com/blog-entry-345.html#more

Hope the next version of either CC1 or GEE will consider about that since it wont cost too much extra.

uglykidwen: 14a84f64ac2549.jpg
(Click for larger image)
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
ampguy
Senior Member
ampguy
Joined: 23 Apr 2010
Posts: 119
Location: Pac NW
Expertise: I like coffee

Posted Thu Sep 22, 2011, 11:25pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

interesting mod. I wonder if his water tank still holds the same amount?

uglykidwen Said:

Personally, I agree with you. I would like to have a pressure gauge too.
There is a Taiwanese connoisseur mod one by himself.

http://ppk10559.blog131.fc2.com/blog-entry-345.html#more

Hope the next version of either CC1 or GEE will consider about that since it wont cost too much extra.

Posted September 22, 2011 link

back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
uglykidwen
Senior Member


Joined: 22 Sep 2011
Posts: 10
Location: Townsville, QLD. AU
Expertise: I love coffee

Posted Thu Sep 22, 2011, 11:33pm
Subject: Re: Crossland Coffee CC1 Espresso machine
 

I believe not.
It also inspire me to do some mod with the tank.
I am planing to extend the tube/hose to an external water tank.
It can save me a lot of effort to remove the tank and put it back (especially when there are few obstacles when moving the tank).
I am sourcing the suitable pipe/hose to reconnect the inlet/outlet hose, and some ideal size of tank can hide behind this machine.
It will be better if I can install a water filter (brita) somewhere too.
back to top
 View Profile Link to this post
showing page 6 of 7 first page | last page previous page | next page
view previous topic | view next topic | view all topics
Discussions > Espresso > Machines > Crossland Coffee...  
New Topics updated topics   New Posts new posts   Unanswered Posts new unanswered     Search Discussion Board search   Discussion Board FAQ faq   Signup sign up  
Not Logged in: Log In to Postlog in
Discussions Quick Jump:
Symbols: New Posts= New Posts since your last visit      No New Posts= No New Posts since last visit     Go to most recent post= Newest post
Forum Rules:
No profanity, illegal acts or personal attacks will be tolerated in these discussion boards.
No commercial posting of any nature will be tolerated; only private sales by private individuals, in the "Buy and Sell" forum.
No cross posting allowed - do not post your topic to more than one forum, nor repost a topic to the same forum.
Who Can Read The Forum? Anyone can read posts in these discussion boards.
Who Can Post New Topics? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post new topics.
Who Can Post Replies? Any registered CoffeeGeek member can post replies.
Can Photos be posted? Anyone can post photos in their new topics or replies.
Who can change or delete posts? Any CoffeeGeek member can edit their own posts. Only moderators can delete posts.
Probationary Period: If you are a new signup for CoffeeGeek, you cannot promote, endorse, criticise or otherwise post an unsolicited endorsement for any company, product or service in your first five postings.
Home Espresso Machines
Watch videos with Gail & Kat, Rocket, Jura Capresso, Saeco, Rancilio, Quick Mill, Nespresso
www.seattlecoffeegear.com
Home | Opinions | Consumer Reviews | Guides & How Tos | CoffeeGeek Reviews | Resources | Forums | Contact Us
CoffeeGeek.com, CoffeeGeek, and Coffee Geek, along with all associated content & images are copyright ©2000-2013 by Mark Prince, all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Content, code, and images may not be reused without permission. Usage of this website signifies agreement with our Terms and Conditions. (0.511394023895)
Privacy Policy | Copyright Info | Terms and Conditions | CoffeeGeek Advertisers | RSS | Find us on Google+