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Shopping For a Hand Grinder? After the cheapest, yet the best? In this Manual Grinder Comparison, we dive into 12 Hand Grinders under $100aud ($70usd/eur/bpd) and review each side by side. Looking at everything from Dimensions to workflow, build quality and burrs and User Experience. Below you'll find timestamps to jump to the Grinder of choice, or watch all the way through to not miss one. There are a few grinders where I reference other grinders back, so I do recommend you check those examples out too. Top 5: Coffee Accessories Hand Grinder Rhinowares Hand Grinder Porlex Tall Hand Grinder Hario Mini Slim Hario Skerton Plus Grinder (For it's Capacity Only) Shop Manual Hand Grinders: https://alternativebrewing.com.au/col... Timestamps: 00:00 Coffee Hand Grinders Under $100 02:45 Hario Smart G Grinder 05:52 Hario Wood Column Grinder 08:24 Bialetti Manual Hand Grinder 10:30 Hario Mini Slim Grinder 12:05 Hario Skerton Plus Grinder 14:39 Yama Hand Grinder 17:35 Rhinowares Hand Grinder 20:42 Hario Mini Slim Pro 22:05 Porlex Hand Grinder 23:58 Hario Prism Grinder 25:52 Hario Canister Grinder 27:50 Coffee Accessories Hand Grinder 31:33 Taste Comparisons 39:02 Espresso Findings Missed in the video - was the explanation of which Grinders do not have Springs in the burr assembly. It is only the 3 Wood/column grinders - the Hario Colum, the Yama and the Hario Canister - that do not have Springs. I would earnestly avoid these setups if you are after any degree of consistency between a grind setting - as without springs in the assemblies - the inner cone burr has the ability to jump up and jam under beans passing through the burrs - this will result in a very inconsistent grind size - without any way to control it. More on the Grind Mechanisms of the above three grinders - and the Hario Skerton+ as well - these mechanisms do have replicable settings across to the common click grinders - it is however my assumption - that if you've ever owned a click-based grinder - you would not want to begin using this notch style of grind change. If you haven't yet had a click-based grinder - then it is difficult to refer to the grind settings of that sort of grinder when adjusting the grind on something like the Hario Skerton or such - hence why I suggest it either be avoided - OR explained lengthy, as to how to get the best settings. You can dial the grinder right back to zero - so long as the screw will not screw down any further - and from there - each notch is about 2-3 clicks on a normal grinder. Disappointed in the Espresso Blind Tasting results - I'm not surprised either. I have had some good results in the past with both the Hario Slim, Porlex and Rhinowares for achieving a Brew Ratio/Recipe that was on point. However - the difficulty I had with all these Grinders (at once) being unable to dial in for an Espresso, which I could equally compare against - goes to show how finicky a Grinder under $100 is for Espresso brewing. Manual Espresso could have paved the way for this - though looking at this avenue - it's really the manipulation of pressure in the Manual Espresso Brewer that overcomes the quality of the Grinders production - so I really couldn't see this as an alternative to the blind tasting - ensuring everything was a close as possible. After thoughts on the Blind Cupping - there would have to be further continuous cupping to say outright that any one grinder made better coffee than another period. I had previously suspected that most grinders would taste fairly similar given the majority of burrs/burr geometry/burr material/Grind adjustment was the same - and if I looked at the cupping results in the video - I would say that my initial thoughts were correct - and the cups that were outliers - were not anomalies but something deviated in their results - ie: incorrect grind size, slipping grind adjustment, incorrect poor cupping protocol/water temperature. Given more and more tests like this - I would imagine more grinders would converge on equal on more accounts than separate in difference. To be clear - this is because essential they're almost the same grinders - at least the Hario Grinders are - and the others are not all that much different. The Coffee Accessories Grinder - I had hoped for better results - but when it comes down to it - it's right on the money for $100 - a bargain - considering there are grinders almost identical to it, selling for $160-180. #alternativebrewing #handgrinders #coffee