Options
- Official Flair replacement parts, listed per model on their site, the exact-fit route
- Generic small espresso drip trays: the Flair's base area accommodates common compact trays, useful if you want stainless or a specific height
- The popular real-world setup: a scale sits where the tray would, with a cloth or micro-tray for spillage, since weighing shots is standard practice on a manual lever
Why height matters
Cup clearance under the group is generous on the 58, but stacking scale plus cup plus tray eats it quickly. Check combined heights if you pull into heavy cups; espresso-specific scales are thin for exactly this reason.
Cleanup reality
Manual levers make less mess than pump machines with three-way valves make in the tray, but more mess around the basket during prep. The tray matters less than a good knock-box and a towel; budget accordingly.
Check your exact model before ordering parts
Flair sells parts per model and revision, and the 58 platform has variants: the standard 58 with its electrically heated brew head and the 58x without it, plus running production tweaks over the years. Trays and base parts are listed against specific models on Flair's store, so identify yours before ordering rather than assuming the platform is uniform. This matters more for base and head parts than for the tray itself, but the habit is worth building: the lever espresso world is small-batch manufacturing, and quiet revisions are normal. When in doubt, Flair's own support is the authoritative source for which part matches which production run.
How owner setups evolve
The pattern owners describe: the stock tray serves for the first weeks, then a thin scale takes its place and never leaves. From there the bench grows a knock box, a dosing funnel to keep grounds out of everything, and often a non-slip mat under the unit, since some owners report the machine shifting slightly under enthusiastic lever pressure on smooth counters. The stock tray usually ends up stored rather than discarded, pulled back out for guest duty or rinse sessions. None of this is required; it is just where the workflow converges once weighing shots becomes routine.
Managing the preheat water
Even with the 58's heated brew head, most owners still preheat the portafilter and cup with hot water, and that water has to go somewhere. The common move is to direct it into the cup you are about to use, warming it in the same motion, or into a spare vessel kept on the bench. The drip tray is the fallback, not the plan; letting every preheat pour land in the tray fills it fast and leaves hot water sitting at the base. A small pitcher dedicated to catch duty is the tidy habit, and it doubles for rinsing the basket between shots.