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Roasting coffee on the Kaffelogic involves a delicate balance between supply of heat and air on the one hand, and the beans on the other. Although the core profiles are designed to deliver excellent results with just about any beans you care to throw at them, very fine heat and fan adjustments can be made via customised profiles where requirements are more exacting e.g. roasting coffee for a competition.
During coffee roasting the thermal properties of the coffee beans undergo changes. As beans dry their specific heat decreases. In addition there are exothermic and endothermic chemical reactions at different times, as well as significant latent heat changes. Sometimes these changes will happen and undesirable effects become established before the automated roast control system adapts. The Kaffelogic system of profile zones allows the roast designer to pre-empt some of these changes to avoid the undesirable effects. This is done by tweaking the control parameters during specific parts (zones) of the roast.
Profile tweaks and changes are not done 'on the fly' during the roast. Instead they are done by editing the profile in Kaffelogic Studio between roasts. The process is iterative: roast - taste - tweak - repeat. The ability to roast batches down to as small as 50g, and the ability to cup coffee directly from the roaster, make this process both economic and fast. Experienced users can dial in a specific result in as little as 3 or 4 iterations.
You are given access to a number of critical settings that affect the way the roast control system works. In most cases it is better to leave the deeper (engineering level) settings untouched. But the openness is there because we never want to assume that we know everything about the Kaffelogic system and we want to allow our users to generate new knowledge if they dare. This is great because if an expert user discovers a beneficial modification it is easy for them to share it with you. Just be prepared to ruin a lot of coffee if you want to go down that particular path for yourself. And no, experimenting will not void your warranty, although touch base with customer support first if you have any concerns about this.