Green Coffee Buying Club
Coffee Discussion boards => Hardware & Equipment => Topic started by: Smksignals on December 13, 2014, 05:23:12 PM
-
Does anyone know of a large retailer with a variety of espresso machines in So Cal? Something similar to a Seattle Coffee Gear store. I want to get into the espresso game and would love to have a hands on type of store to shop at.
Thanks !
-
Try these folks, I purchased parts for an old Astra espresso grinder, very helpful.
http://www.astramfr.com/ (http://www.astramfr.com/)
-
Thx for the link. I am looking for a store with a variety of different manufactures, kind of like SCG.
-
I know. I would love a store like SCG down here. Must be amazing to walk inside and see all of the variety, of everything.
-
This might sound contrary, and while it would be neat to see and play with them, I don't think that will tell you much or should be given much weight for a purchase decision. I would trust online reviews, forum research, etc, and settle on a machine that is in my price range and functions well over the course of years with good serviceability, with aesthetics a lesser consideration. Walking through a well-stocked store, even pulling shots on several of them will still give you an incomplete picture compared to thousands of users pooling their experiences online.
-
I know. I would love a store like SCG down here. Must be amazing to walk inside and see all of the variety, of everything.
Jim Dukes in San Diego is a good place but its very industrial style.
-
Thx guys. I want to make sure I am not missing a 'super store' in the area. I have done a lot of reading online over the past few days and have pretty much decided on what to buy. I thought it would be nice to do the touchy-feelie thing. :)
-
This might sound contrary, and while it would be neat to see and play with them, I don't think that will tell you much or should be given much weight for a purchase decision. I would trust online reviews, forum research, etc, and settle on a machine that is in my price range and functions well over the course of years with good serviceability, with aesthetics a lesser consideration. Walking through a well-stocked store, even pulling shots on several of them will still give you an incomplete picture compared to thousands of users pooling their experiences online.
This is very good and sound advice. It also applies to many other purchases that people engage in on a daily basis, such as buying a car. You can research your purchase until your brain feels like it's going to explode. In the end most people want to see and touch the item just to help them confirm they are making the right choice. And whether it makes logical sense or not, aesthetics plays a role. That might even be the tie breaker.
-
wise choice not posting what you've decided on so that you won't get a ton of differing opinions to
muck up your decision... especially mine...
remember, upgraditis will occur as soon as you hit "buy" :-).