The Dedica is a compact espresso machine sold in deliberately crippled form: the pressurized basket flattens flavor, the rubber-sleeved steam wand can't texture milk, and the pump runs too hot for clean shots. Strip the steam wand cover, swap in a non-pressurized basket and bottomless portafilter, pair it with a capable hand grinder, and it pulls genuinely good espresso for years. Out of the box it fights you: the descaling alert blinks within a month even on filtered water, budget grinders either choke the machine or flood the basket, and the portafilter jams in the group head when overfilled. Owners who enjoy sorting a machine out report five to ten years of daily use; those who expected plug-and-play espresso should spend more or buy a Bambino.
A fully manual lever machine that trades electricity and automation for compact size and hands-on control over every variable in the shot. You heat water separately, load the portafilter, and generate all pressure by hand, which means you need a stable counter and the patience to dial in grind and technique yourself. The payoff is real espresso in tight spaces and the ability to experiment with unconventional pulls (one owner nailed cold espresso by steeping grounds for three minutes before a slow press), but this is for the tinkerer who finds the process rewarding, not the person who wants reliable morning shots on autopilot. If you already own a grinder and like solving small mechanical puzzles, it's a capable tool at a fair price; if you want convenience or speed, walk.