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.
The MaraX is the heat exchanger machine that finally solves the cooling flush problem, its PID-controlled system lets you pull a shot and steam milk back-to-back without the ritual purge that plagues traditional HX designs. That workflow advantage made V1 owners loyal for half a decade, but V2 models leak: the drip tray purge spout overshoots, water pools inside the chassis, and at 16 to 18 months you find puddles under the machine or steam wand failures from scaled sensors. Buy a used V1 if you can find one, or wait for V3 field reports to confirm Lelit fixed the plumbing; skip V2 unless you're comfortable with warranty claims or DIY solenoid cleanings.