Why is backflushing a thing?
By reversing flow through the grouphead with a backflush, you are pushing all the stuff you are trying to clean from the grouphead back into the boiler and through the 3 way valves.
It is effectively pushing the crud back into the system, not getting rid of it.
If you look at the design of most of the espresso boilers, they are not bottom outlet. They have a weir pipe in them, this means that the crud you are pushing back in to the boiler can't get back out and silts up on the bottom.
Any crud not caught in the wier, gets pushed into the valving.
I don't get it. surely for cleaning you flush out, not in?
I read Gaggia do not recommend back flushing. After looking at this, i would have to agree.
A cleaning cycle with solution and a periodic removal and clean of the shower head seems much more "Correct".
The process plumbing and flow of a espresso machine is simple enough and i am struggling to see what the backflush is supposed to do?
By reversing flow through the grouphead with a backflush, you are pushing all the stuff you are trying to clean from the grouphead back into the boiler and through the 3 way valves.
It is effectively pushing the crud back into the system, not getting rid of it.
If you look at the design of most of the espresso boilers, they are not bottom outlet. They have a weir pipe in them, this means that the crud you are pushing back in to the boiler can't get back out and silts up on the bottom.
Any crud not caught in the wier, gets pushed into the valving.
I don't get it. surely for cleaning you flush out, not in?
I read Gaggia do not recommend back flushing. After looking at this, i would have to agree.
A cleaning cycle with solution and a periodic removal and clean of the shower head seems much more "Correct".
The process plumbing and flow of a espresso machine is simple enough and i am struggling to see what the backflush is supposed to do?