The swap in outline
- Empty the hopper and run the chamber dry, then remove the top burr carrier per the Mignon service pattern
- Replace both burrs as a set, seating them clean of grounds and torqueing screws evenly
- Expect to re-dial from scratch: fresh burrs cut differently, and settings shift markedly, then drift slightly as edges season over the first kilos
When it is due
Espresso-fineness home use dulls flat burrs over several hundred kilograms of coffee, which for most households is many years. Fading shot clarity, slower grinding, and more fines despite clean burrs are the aging signs. Sudden problems trace to a stone or screw nick, not gradual wear.
Upgrade option
Eureka and third parties sell more than one burr variant in the Specialita's fitment, so some owners try a higher-tier or specialty set at replacement time; confirm the variant physically fits your exact model before ordering. That is a taste experiment more than an objective upgrade; the stock burrs are already tuned well for espresso.
While the grinder is open
A burr swap is the natural moment for the deeper service that never otherwise happens. Vacuum the chamber and the exit chute thoroughly; years of compacted fines hide in both and quietly undo the benefit of new burrs. Brush the carrier threads clean, since grounds trapped in the threads can seat a burr fractionally off true. Photograph or note your adjustment position before disassembly, not because the old number will be right afterward, but because it gives a reference for how far the new burrs moved things. Reassemble patiently; a burr seated on a stray ground is the classic source of mystery inconsistency after a swap.
Flat burrs and alignment
Flat burrs reward precise seating more than conicals do, which is why the enthusiast community developed the dry-erase marker test: color the face of one burr, reassemble, close the burrs briefly to just-touching, and check whether the marker wears evenly around the circle. Uneven wear means the burr sits fractionally tilted, usually from debris under the carrier or uneven screw tension. For ordinary home espresso this is optional fussiness; the Specialita grinds well when simply assembled clean. But if you are chasing maximum clarity from a burr refresh, alignment checking is where that last margin lives.
What actually changes in the cup
Owners who replaced genuinely worn burrs report the same cluster of changes: grinding speeds back up, the grounds look less powdery, shots regain the clarity that had faded so gradually nobody noticed it leaving, and dialing in feels more repeatable day to day. Owners who replaced healthy burrs out of optimism report something quieter: not much. That split is worth internalizing before spending the money. Burr replacement is a repair with a satisfying payoff when wear was real, and a near-placebo when it was not, which is why the diagnosis step matters more than the swap itself.