Bezzera - Bz99s Manual

In the pantheon of home espresso machines, few have earned the quiet reverence of the Bezzera BZ99S. At a glance, it looks like a relic from a 1980s Milanese bar. There are no LCD screens, no programmable volumetric buttons, and no pressure profiling. Instead, you are greeted by chunky chrome toggle switches, a massive chrome lever, and a naked, industrial presence that dares you to master it.

Because the BZ99S has a massive brass boiler (often 3.5 to 4 liters) and a heavy E61 group, it does not heat up quickly. You flip the red switch, listen for the hum of the heating element, and wait. The machine demands patience. You cannot "hurry" a BZ99S. bezzera bz99s manual

Descale is not optional. Because the boiler is so large, scale buildup will eventually kill the heating element. If you buy a used one, be prepared to open it up. Also, the toggle switches are rated for 15 amps, but they fail after 15 years. Replacing them requires a soldering iron. In the pantheon of home espresso machines, few

The BZ99S is not a smart appliance. It is a simple, professional tool. And because it is simple, it is brilliant. If you find one on the used market, buy it. Then spend a weekend learning to love its quirks. You will never need another espresso machine again. | Feature | Specification | | :--- | :--- | | Boiler Size | 3.5 – 4.0 Liters (Copper/Brass) | | Grouphead | Manual E61 (Non-spring, direct lever) | | Portafilter Size | 58mm Commercial | | Pump Type | Rotary (Plumbed) or Vibratory (Reservoir) | | Water Source | Plumbed-in OR Tank + Flojet / Built-in reservoir | | Power | 1500W (220V EU or 110V US models exist) | | Dimensions (WxDxH) | ~13" x 17" x 16" | | Weight | ~42 lbs | | Steam Power | Commercial grade (4-hole tip) | Instead, you are greeted by chunky chrome toggle

The BZ99S is not a machine for the passive coffee drinker. It is a machine for the operator . To understand it is to understand the soul of traditional Italian espresso engineering: robust, repairable, and ruthlessly manual. To own a Bezzera is to own a piece of history. Luigi Bezzera invented the first commercial espresso machine in 1901 (the "Tipo Gigante" with a boiler and grouphead). The BZ lineage (the "BZ" stands for Bezzera, with the "99" denoting a specific commercial/compact series) carries that torch directly. The "S" denotes the model iteration.

CN / EN

In the pantheon of home espresso machines, few have earned the quiet reverence of the Bezzera BZ99S. At a glance, it looks like a relic from a 1980s Milanese bar. There are no LCD screens, no programmable volumetric buttons, and no pressure profiling. Instead, you are greeted by chunky chrome toggle switches, a massive chrome lever, and a naked, industrial presence that dares you to master it.

Because the BZ99S has a massive brass boiler (often 3.5 to 4 liters) and a heavy E61 group, it does not heat up quickly. You flip the red switch, listen for the hum of the heating element, and wait. The machine demands patience. You cannot "hurry" a BZ99S.

Descale is not optional. Because the boiler is so large, scale buildup will eventually kill the heating element. If you buy a used one, be prepared to open it up. Also, the toggle switches are rated for 15 amps, but they fail after 15 years. Replacing them requires a soldering iron.

The BZ99S is not a smart appliance. It is a simple, professional tool. And because it is simple, it is brilliant. If you find one on the used market, buy it. Then spend a weekend learning to love its quirks. You will never need another espresso machine again. | Feature | Specification | | :--- | :--- | | Boiler Size | 3.5 – 4.0 Liters (Copper/Brass) | | Grouphead | Manual E61 (Non-spring, direct lever) | | Portafilter Size | 58mm Commercial | | Pump Type | Rotary (Plumbed) or Vibratory (Reservoir) | | Water Source | Plumbed-in OR Tank + Flojet / Built-in reservoir | | Power | 1500W (220V EU or 110V US models exist) | | Dimensions (WxDxH) | ~13" x 17" x 16" | | Weight | ~42 lbs | | Steam Power | Commercial grade (4-hole tip) |

The BZ99S is not a machine for the passive coffee drinker. It is a machine for the operator . To understand it is to understand the soul of traditional Italian espresso engineering: robust, repairable, and ruthlessly manual. To own a Bezzera is to own a piece of history. Luigi Bezzera invented the first commercial espresso machine in 1901 (the "Tipo Gigante" with a boiler and grouphead). The BZ lineage (the "BZ" stands for Bezzera, with the "99" denoting a specific commercial/compact series) carries that torch directly. The "S" denotes the model iteration.

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