As I stated above, this is my plan@Sunfire96
reserve the ice until you get down to 80F, and add it to help with the last 15 degrees.
As I stated above, this is my plan@Sunfire96
reserve the ice until you get down to 80F, and add it to help with the last 15 degrees.
sorry, must have overlooked that, let us know how this works out for youAs I stated above, this is my plan
Dats a BEAST!@Sunfire96
Maybe what would be most effective would be to reserve the ice until you get down to 80F, and add it to help with the last 15 degrees.
I could see it making more of a difference then.
You may recall the Frankenchiller I made a few years ago, I gave it to a friend as I couldn't use it any more.
(I switched to a CF chiller as I am boiling with a steam condenser)
Another option for quicker chilling would be this type of chiller
https://jadedbrewing.com/products/the-hydra
FRNAKENCHILLER
Two flow paths, so cool water flowing through two separate coils of tubing.
I would prefill it with tap hot water before putting it in the kettle so the boil would come back quicker.
View attachment 29062
Would you not rather just run the cooling water through the ice? Call me kooky, but one would think that would avoid sanitizing/infection issues by not having an additional piece of hardware contact the wort below 140F. Just thinkin outside the box. (or the chiller as the case may be).Not yet implemented, but I have this idea: use my counterflow chiller to get the wort to groundwater temperature (as I do now), then in summer (groundwater at 70+) run the wort through a second coil immersed in a bucket of ice water. I suspect 10 lbs of ice will get 5 gallons down another 15 F.
(5 gal @ 70 run thru 5 gal @ 32 means 51 F should result, but in reality it might be closer to 56 F)
No. Got a immersion that had double coilsYou switched to a plate chiller, didn't you?
I gave this chiller to a friend, but I do recall that having it filled with hot tap water helped the boil recover more quickly. My theory in trying that is that air is actually a good insulator. Think dual pane glass windows, and old time building construction when they had inner and outer walls with an air space in between.Dats a BEAST!
Dunno if the boil would recover quicker with hot water or if it was completely drained when dropped in. I suspect the latter may be truer.
Ice is expensive. Water is relatively inexpensive.Would you not rather just run the cooling water through the ice? Call me kooky, but one would think that would avoid sanitizing/infection issues by not having an additional piece of hardware contact the wort below 140F. Just thinkin outside the box. (or the chiller as the case may be).
Ain’t StarSan about the same stuff?After watching the ph video. Gonna put this to use. View attachment 29381
Kinda. Star san is not only phosphoric.Ain’t StarSan about the same stuff?
I buy that from Duda too. It'll last a long time at 85%Kinda. Star san is not only phosphoric.
This is 85%. much stronger. Most phosphoric for beer making is 10-15%
Ya. Calc says 2ml will move 5gal about 0.5 ph. LolI buy that from Duda too. It'll last a long time at 85%
For hops? I got some that had far too big a weave. The hop pallets just washed through once wetGot 100 of these yesterday. Using 2 or 3 per monthly batch these will last me 2.5-4 years.View attachment 29388
Yes.For hops? I got some that had far too big a weave. The hop pallets just washed through once wet