Eureka Mignon Filtro Silent Coffee Grinder | Stepless | Manual | 12oz | White
$269.00
Price: $269.00
(as of Mar 21, 2025 01:13:46 UTC – Details)
Enjoy the sound of silence with the Eureka Mignon Filtro Silent Coffee Grinder. Following the success of the original Filtro, Eureka’s R+D team has added motor and case insulation to this brew-specific Mignon—improving both noise and vibration for your morning grind. Equipped with brew-specific 50mm flat burrs, a redesigned grind path, and a Hand Brew dosing cup, the Filtro Silent offers everything you need to grind for your favorite slow-brew method. Other niceties include an improved stepless grind adjustment knob, bottom-burr adjust for easier cleaning, and a just-right 12 ounce hopper for a bag of coffee.
Silent Technology Silent grind everywhere: coffee shop and home. The exclusive anti-vibration solution reduces the grinding noise by approximately 20 dB compared to the conventional grinders and paves the way for a new way of grinding coffee: accurate and quiet.
“High Speed” Maintenance Handy and easy maintenance operations. The typical mechanical composition of our burrholder set, that can be dismantled removing only 9 screws, permits to quickly replace and clean the burrs as well as a remarkable time and coffee saving.
Stepless Micrometric Regulation System (patented by Eureka) Patented by Eureka, it assures incomparable setting precision and saving of time and coffee. The micrometric system with infinite adjustment points, the only one based on the lower burr repositioning, guarantees incomparable grinding performances and allows to carry out maintenance operations without losing the grinding setting.
ACE System Anti-Clumps & Electrostaticity. Conceived to prevent the clumps development and eliminate the electrostatic charge of ground coffee, the ACE System is the common denominator in every Eureka on-demand grinder. Due to its regulating action over the coffee outflow, ACE System ensures an incomparable cleanliness and dose consistency.
Extra-comfort knob for greater ease of use
Handbrew Cup (80g) included, with soft molded base
Handbuilt in Florence, Italy
Scooby921 –
Filtro Silent
5 star grinder. 4 star setup. The grinder is great so far. Heavy, so it’s not gonna move. The sound deadening works. Easily half the volume of my old Breville Smart Pro. Probably twice the weight too. I’m enjoying not having the excess noise while I’m still trying to wake up.4 stars for the overall package. Mine was missing the lid for the bean hopper up top. Not the end of the world if you’re storing beans in a vacuum container and only adding what you need each time. The dosing cup instead of the proper container for the grounds…why? Seems to be the only way to get the “silent” version. I appreciate the novelty for those who are gonna grind a weighted amount for overly involved precision stuff with a chemex or clever. Make it an option to add the cup. Still give us the normal container. As someone who has never used the grinder before, I didn’t realize the grounds were gonna shoot out and not fall straight down. See pic. Now it’s luck to put the cup in the right spot. I don’t want to measure the distance and hope all the grounds find the cup. So I have to stand there and hold it while it grinds. No, it’s not the end of the world. It’s a few seconds. But it’s a mess someone will make if the first time the run the grinder. Family or friends over and thinking they’ll do it themselves…
Ezekiel Taves –
Good entry point for fancier grinders
I have an all black Filtro grinder.Compared to the other versions of this grinder, this is the most basic. The only things it has is a knob to set grind fineness, and a grind button that has to held down. This is not much of a problem to me, because I did only want a basic coffee grinder. But the manual can be a little confusing in that regard.It works very well for single-dosing coffee. I have used it for pour-over brews, and Aeropress brews, and they both turn out very nice.My only gripe with this grinder is the grind adjustment knob. I would prefer if the knob had an obvious lowest setting, and highest setting. To get a good setting takes a bit of eyeballing the grinds. Once a good setting is found though, it’s very easy adjust as long as you remember what the baseline number is, and which direction the knob was turned.