I've had a La Pavoni Professional lever espresso machine for a couple years now, which I got on ebay and fixed up. Getting it working turned out to be completely uneventful, so I never wrote up anything about it. I recently restored a Europiccola for my sister, and this time around the restoration was much more involved. It was in pretty rough shape when I got it - all the seals were shot, the sightglass was smashed, and the copper/brass plating was peeling horribly. But the heating element and electronics were in good shape, and core mechanical pieces worked.
I forgot to fully document the state I received it in, but here's what it looked like minus the grouphead:
All the seals needed replacing. The trickiest of these was the seal in the top of the grouphead. This seal is held in by a brass washer and a retaining retaining ring, which was made out of non-stainless steel. It sits in a chamber full of steam, so I don't know what they were thinking there. So the retaining ring was extremely rusted, so much so that the holes used for removing it with snap ring pliers were gone:
This machine originally had a copper finish on the boiler and gold/brass finish on the grouphead and base, but both were discolored and peeling. The finish on this unit was strange - on the outside, there was a clear varnish layer (the source of the peeling). Under that, the boiler has an electroplated layer of actual copper, and the base has an electroplated brass layer. Neither of those layers were in very good shape. Where the copper/brass were wearing through, there were signs of a chrome coat beneath that.
I took the boiler as far apart as I could before stripping the coating. The sightglass attachment points are bolted through the boiler, with their nuts on the inside of the boiler, at a funny angle. I'm sure there's a specialized wrench for removing these, but I didn't have that. I used a 16mm wrench with a 12-point ratchet. Because the opening at the base of the boiler is pretty small, the wrench couldn't be turned enough to click past one pawl of the ratchet. To make progress, I had to turn the wrench a few degrees, remove the wrench, manually click the ratchet over two clicks, take up the backlash in the ratchet, put it back in, and turn the nut a few degrees. And repeat several dozen times. I couldn't get the wrench around the nuts holding on the pressure relief valve or steam wand, so I just gave up and left them on.
A combination many rounds of paint stripper and scrubbing with a gentle polishing compound stripped off the varnish and electroplated layers, and revealed an almost pristine chrome coat on the boiler. The base wasn't in quite as good shape, but a few cycles of scrubbing with scotch-brite and sanding with progressively finer sandpapers improved it.
Part way through stripping, the boiler had this really interesting crackle-texture:
The chrome on the base slowly being revealed:
Kind of interesting side note - I could have taken off all the copper with just paint stripper. I noticed that when I wiped off the paint stripper residue, it was blue from oxidizing the copper. Scrubbing was much faster though. I used some glass stovetop cleaner, which is very gently abrasive and won't scratch the chrome. Steel wool probably would have been much faster, but I didn't have any on hand. Steel is softer than chrome, so I don't think it would have scratched the chrome.
The base wasn't in quite as good shape as the boiler, but was able to get most of the blemishes out with scotch-brite and sandpaper. In the end it doesn't look as nice as the glossy boiler, but the smooth brushed look is still much better than it started out. Here it is going back together:
Looks like Merry Christmas to your sister ;)
ReplyDelete(Wishing you a good one as well :)