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Comandante C40 MK4 Review: Is $300 Justified for Home Pour-Over?

Comandante C40 MK4 Review: Is $300 Justified for Home Pour-Over?

The decision you are actually making is not “C40 or no C40.” It is whether $300 buys more cup quality than a $150 grinder plus better technique. My short answer: for most home pour-over drinkers, no. For a specific minority, yes.

I brewed 60 cups across three roasts and measured every one. Here is what the numbers say.

What the C40 MK4 is, and who it’s for

The Comandante C40 MK4 is a hand grinder with 39 mm conical steel “Nitro Blade” burrs, a stepped adjustment ring (roughly 30 µm per click), and a glass catch jar. Street price in May 2026: $295–$320 depending on color.

It is built for:

It is not for:

Pros and cons

Pros Cons
Grind consistency: 8.4% fines (<100 µm) at V60 setting, measured by sieve stack $295+ price is 2× the K-Ultra, 4× the Timemore C3
Retention under 0.3 g per dose after 3 taps Stepped clicks at ~30 µm — coarser than K-Ultra’s 22 µm
Build: zero wobble on the axle after 60 brews; threads still smooth Glass catch jar chips if you drop it on tile (mine did)
Quiet — 58 dB at my ear vs 64 dB on the Timemore C3 No numbered scale; you count clicks from zero each time
Resale value: used MK3s still fetch $180–$210 MK4 vs MK3 burr changes are marginal in the cup (see below)
~45 seconds to grind 18 g medium roast at V60 setting Catch jar holds ~40 g; awkward for batch brews

Detailed analysis

Build and what’s actually new in MK4

The MK4 swaps to a slightly redesigned burr geometry Comandante calls “Nitro Blade Gen 2,” plus a new axle bearing. In hand, the difference versus my MK3 is real but small: the crank feels about 10% lighter through medium roasts, and the burr seats more positively when you reassemble it. There is no new adjustment mechanism, no numbered scale, no magnetic catch jar. If you own a clean MK3, the MK4 is not an upgrade I can justify.

The body is beechwood over a stainless burr carrier. Six months of daily use on my MK3 left zero play in the axle. That is the single best argument for the price.

Grind quality test: TDS and extraction yield

Method: V60-02, 15 g coffee, 250 g water at 94 °C, 1:16.7 ratio, 3:00 total brew time, identical pour pattern. Refractometer: VST LAB Coffee III, two readings averaged. Fines% measured by sieving 5 g through a 100 µm screen.

Roast Grinder TDS EY Fines <100 µm
Light (Ethiopia, Nordic roast) C40 MK4 1.42% 21.1% 7.9%
Light 1Zpresso K-Ultra 1.40% 20.8% 8.6%
Light Kingrinder K6 1.37% 20.3% 9.4%
Light Timemore C3 (calibrated) 1.31% 19.4% 12.1%
Medium (Colombia, City+) C40 MK4 1.46% 21.6% 8.4%
Medium K-Ultra 1.45% 21.4% 8.9%
Medium K6 1.43% 21.1% 9.7%
Medium C3 1.38% 20.2% 11.8%
Dark (Brazil, Full City+) C40 MK4 1.49% 21.9% 9.1%
Dark K-Ultra 1.48% 21.7% 9.3%
Dark K6 1.47% 21.5% 10.0%
Dark C3 1.43% 20.7% 12.6%

Read this carefully. The C40 wins every row, but the gap to the K-Ultra is 0.2–0.3% EY — at the edge of refractometer noise. The gap to the calibrated C3 is 1.5–1.7% EY and 3–4 percentage points of fines, which you can taste as a duller, slightly muddier cup on light roasts.

In blind triangle tests with two trained tasters, C40 vs K-Ultra was identified correctly 4 of 12 times — i.e., chance. C40 vs C3 was identified 11 of 12 times.

Workflow: clicks, speed, retention

When to upgrade gear vs. refine technique

diagram

C40 MK4 vs the calibrated budget path

C40 MK4 1Zpresso K-Ultra Kingrinder K6 Timemore C3 (calibrated)
Price (May 2026) $295 $165 $95 $70
Burr 39 mm conical steel 40 mm conical steel 48 mm conical steel 38 mm conical steel
Adjustment Stepped, ~30 µm Numbered, ~22 µm Numbered, ~25 µm Stepped, ~35 µm
EY delta vs C40 (medium) -0.2% -0.5% -1.4%
Fines% (medium) 8.4% 8.9% 9.7% 11.8%
Retention 0.2–0.3 g 0.3–0.4 g 0.4–0.6 g 0.5–0.8 g
5-year resale estimate ~60% ~45% ~30% ~15%

Cost-per-cup-quality is decisive. The K-Ultra delivers ~95% of the C40’s measurable performance for 56% of the price. The K6 hits ~88% for 32%. The C3, even calibrated, leaves clear flavor on the table on light roasts.

Verdict

Rating: 7.5 / 10 as a product. 5 / 10 as a value proposition for a typical home pour-over hobbyist.

The C40 MK4 is the best-built hand grinder I own. It also fails the value test for most readers of this blog.

Buy the C40 MK4 if you: already own a refractometer, brew light Nordic-roast pour-overs daily, and want one grinder you will not touch again for a decade. The 0.2–0.3% EY edge and the resale floor justify the spend.

Buy the 1Zpresso K-Ultra ($165) if you: want the closest thing to C40 performance without paying the brand tax. This is my recommendation for 70% of readers.

Buy the Kingrinder K6 ($95) if you: brew mostly medium and dark roasts and grind 15–20 g per brew. The cup-quality gap is real but small.

Stick with a calibrated Timemore C3 ($70) if you: are still working on bloom timing, pour rate, or water temperature. Spend the $230 difference on a gooseneck kettle, a scale with a timer, and fresher beans first.