- Joined
- Aug 28, 2013
- Messages
- 111
- Reaction score
- 4
- Points
- 18
Here's what I've been doing that has worked pretty well. It really just seems to synthesize a lot of what's been said in various posts.
I have a copper coil immersion chiller. The first thing I did was distort the chiller so that it isn't cylindrical. It looks more like a spirograph drawing. Imagine a three-petal flower that repeats as you travel down the spiral. This way, a greater cross section of the wort is in contact with the coil.
Then, rather than run tap water through the chiller, which as has been stated can be practically futile in southern states in the summer, I put the kettle in an ice bath and run the water from the ice-bath itself through the chiller. I bought an inexpensive aquarium pump (I know it was less than $20, I think it was less than $10). The pump goes in to the ice bath and pumps icy water through the chiller. The tap water refills the ice bath as a "prechiller" like what was described by someone else.
10#-15# of ice and maybe 5 additional gallons of water cools 3 gallons of wort in about 15 minutes.
I have a copper coil immersion chiller. The first thing I did was distort the chiller so that it isn't cylindrical. It looks more like a spirograph drawing. Imagine a three-petal flower that repeats as you travel down the spiral. This way, a greater cross section of the wort is in contact with the coil.
Then, rather than run tap water through the chiller, which as has been stated can be practically futile in southern states in the summer, I put the kettle in an ice bath and run the water from the ice-bath itself through the chiller. I bought an inexpensive aquarium pump (I know it was less than $20, I think it was less than $10). The pump goes in to the ice bath and pumps icy water through the chiller. The tap water refills the ice bath as a "prechiller" like what was described by someone else.
10#-15# of ice and maybe 5 additional gallons of water cools 3 gallons of wort in about 15 minutes.