I have a Bonavita, and I de-scale with vinegar once a year or so I'd guess. It will start to sputter a bit when brewing, and that's how I know it's time. It works pretty well.Anyone have experiences to share in regards to descaling your Moccamaster? The recommended descaling of the unit after 100 cycles got away from me. I had more like 200 cycles with mine (6 months) and noticed a definite decline in the flavor of the coffee. The unit still brewed a pot quickly, but the water must have not been reaching the appropriate extraction temperature. I'm new to the fancy coffee thing, so please forgive my ignorance. I bought a bottle of liquid descaler from Urnex and ran a cycle with it. It brought her right back to life! I don't recall any other brewer I've owned being effected so quickly.
@bdc101 nailed it:I feel like a simpleton with my $25 Black & Decker coffee maker I bought at Walmart.
What am I missing by not having this?
I also find that it sprays the water out in a more widespread pattern than cheap ones that just have a single hole it drains hot water into the grounds. I've used cheap ones in Airbnb's that didn't even get all of the grounds wet! I found dry grounds all the way around in a circle around the outer rim of the grounds. WIth the higher temp, you get better extraction of the coffee, and all of the grounds are fully wet.Cheap coffee makers don't get the water hot enough and don't maintain the same temperature throughout the brew. It makes a difference in the flavor. I have a Bonavita which I used for a few years and it was a big improvement over a cheap coffee maker.
Getting one of these machines and a good coffee grinder are the two best things you can do for your coffee.