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Baratza Sette 30 vs Fellow Opus

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Fellow Opus comes out ahead overall (6.2 vs 4.6), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Baratza Sette 30Fellow Opus
Reliability & Durability 3.3 4.3
User Sentiment 7.0 7.8
Complaint Severity 6.3 6.7
Consensus Strength 1.6 3.4
Value for Money 2.3 5.4
Owner Advocacy 2.0 5.2
Baratza Sette 30

The Sette 30 is a single-dosing grinder with a fatal flaw: the plastic gearbox cracks, motors burn out, and owners replace parts so often that Baratza's excellent repair support becomes a feature, not a safety net. The stepped adjustment is too coarse for real espresso without a $100 upgrade kit, at which point you're nearly at Sette 270 pricing anyway. Skip this unless you're running a pressurized basket or genuinely enjoy tinkering. For reliable daily grinding without the maintenance drama, spend the extra on an all-metal Eureka Mignon and sleep soundly.

Fellow Opus

Fellow's $200 all-purpose grinder is a pour-over specialist in espresso clothing. The original clogged relentlessly, coffee caking on chamber walls until owners either deep-cleaned weekly or upgraded within two years. The current Opus 2 solved retention, but espresso remains its weak spot: recommended settings choke most machines, so you grind coarser than the dial suggests and still get less consistency than a DF54 or Eureka Mignon Zero at the same price. Buy it if pour-over is your main game and you want something compact and handsome on the counter. If espresso matters, you'll outgrow it fast.