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.
This grinder delivers solid burr quality at a budget price for pour-over and drip, but it's fundamentally unsafe for long-term use. Grounds migrate into the motor housing over months, creating a fire hazard that multiple owners have independently documented, and the extreme retention means stale coffee mixes with every fresh batch. If you're brewing coarse methods and never touching espresso, it works fine short-term, but the safety issue and inability to grind fine enough for espresso make it a poor investment for anyone who might expand their coffee setup or keep a grinder for years.