Ascholten, I agree absolutely. NEVER walk away from your roaster. AND have one or two fire extinguishers in the room. The feature on the Sonofresco is that you can set your program and monitor it while doing something else in the room. Label your bag, create and invoice, read these threads, etc. As long as you’re not easily distracted it’s ok. Always watch the end of the roast intently. (After all Fahrenheit 451 is the point at which paper burns).
Java Girl. Glad to hear you like the machine that well. Ive been saying for a bit they are great roasters.
I do have to say to you though, you mentioned, you have to watch it every minute. You should do that with ANY coffee roaster. Never walk away from a roaster that is active. It is way too easy to start fires in any roaster, (trust me, I even managed in an I roast) and if you are not there when that happens, you could be in serious trouble.
Seriously though, walking away from a roast in process is a very bad idea no matter what from a safety perspective.
I have actually purposely pushed coffee to the flame point on every roaster I own, I did this because I needed to see when it happens, ie what stage, warning signs im getting there and most importantly how the machine reacts to that event. Especially considering the Artisan is a fluid bed with insane power, I needed to see if I was going to turn the thing into a fireball sprinkler or what if it ever caught on fire. That makes a big difference between if I just sit there with a small hand held extinguisher or arm the Halon system I have in my garage.
The Artisan IS simpler if you just want to roast and go but it also has every capability of being very complex if you want to experiment as well. I have also purposely held coffee right on the verge of crack (turn heat down and let it soak for about 45 seconds) for development and then pushed it through. That's hard to do on most other machines, they either don't give you that kind of control on temperature, or are slower to react to temp changes because they are running at almost 100 percent capacity heatwise.
I have also used my Artisan to roast cocoa beans too. Totally different experience there and Id recommend a stainless colendar to put on top of the roast chamber because of the nature of cocoa, you need a ton of loft to circulate them right and if one gets caught right it'll throw it into the neighbors yard, so you need a better containment for cocoa beans. the stainless colendar also works wonders too if you are roasting over rated capacity. I have put 8 lbs into mine at a shot. I have the artisan 6. The limiting factor believe it or not is NOT the heat input, it's the physical space in the roasting funnel. The beans get too close to the top and they'll start slopping over and out, but a colendar on top works wonders.
Also FWIW, I was only running 8800 Watts to roast 7.5 Lb of greens on my Artisan 6. Running full bore the thing can put out a teensy bit under 11 KW.
Aaron
[/quote]