Upgrade - advice needed please
Upgrade - advice needed please
I've not been brewing for a good couple of years now, but I really want to start again. I'm currently living in a small two bed and don't have a garage so space is a big factor. I've been eying up the single vessel systems but I can't justify spending that much. For me the biggest part of brewing is the satisfaction in knowing I can make beer for virtually nothing!
With that in mind I'm probably going to carry on using my DIY mash tun and just upgrade my boiler to something shiny. My current boiler is a blue drum with kettle elements that I've bodged together. She's done me well but is definitely a bit past it
Gas or Electric?
I like the idea of electric but my worry is that Using two elements will trip the electrics. In our old house I could run one element from the garage and the other from the house as they were on separate circuits.
How do others get around this? Can you use a more powerful element than a standard kettle jobbie and fit a temperature controller to dial it back once you hit the boil?
Im tempted with getting a burner and was eyeing up this in my local home brew shop http://www.the-home-brew-shop.co.uk/aca ... meter.html but the pot seemed a bit flimsy...
I'd really appreciate any advice!
Cheers,
Sam
With that in mind I'm probably going to carry on using my DIY mash tun and just upgrade my boiler to something shiny. My current boiler is a blue drum with kettle elements that I've bodged together. She's done me well but is definitely a bit past it
Gas or Electric?
I like the idea of electric but my worry is that Using two elements will trip the electrics. In our old house I could run one element from the garage and the other from the house as they were on separate circuits.
How do others get around this? Can you use a more powerful element than a standard kettle jobbie and fit a temperature controller to dial it back once you hit the boil?
Im tempted with getting a burner and was eyeing up this in my local home brew shop http://www.the-home-brew-shop.co.uk/aca ... meter.html but the pot seemed a bit flimsy...
I'd really appreciate any advice!
Cheers,
Sam
Cheers and gone,
Mozza
Mozza
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
If you have an electric cooker switch with a socket outlet then 1 element powered from there and the other from a normal socketIn our old house I could run one element from the garage and the other from the house as they were on separate circuits.
How do others get around this
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Yes most of us with 2 x electric elements do source power from 2 distinct ring mains, just ensure any extension leads used are suitably rated for the full 13a and are all fully uncoiled before use
regarding more powerful elements the weak link in the 'chain' is the 13a plug/socket, So No element that can draw more than 13a is a good idea. going more powerful will require new a suitably rated plug/socket installing and probably the wiring to a dedicated mcb too.
gas is less efficient with a lot of heat lost to the wind even if a windbreak is employed.
buying the stockpots direct from the ebay.fr suplier will save you a lot of cash(50-60%) catering-portal.bergland@msg.afterbuy.de , though you will need to fit your own tap if needed. the dial thermometer is eye candy and not very useful in fact would be more of a hinderence for a simple biab brew technique getting in the way or worse ripping the bag.. IMHO Your better off with an accurate thermometer that looks less snazzy Accurate Mechanical dial thermometers that you can calibrate are far from cheap while a £3 digital thermometer can read true +/- 1c ..
regarding more powerful elements the weak link in the 'chain' is the 13a plug/socket, So No element that can draw more than 13a is a good idea. going more powerful will require new a suitably rated plug/socket installing and probably the wiring to a dedicated mcb too.
gas is less efficient with a lot of heat lost to the wind even if a windbreak is employed.
buying the stockpots direct from the ebay.fr suplier will save you a lot of cash(50-60%) catering-portal.bergland@msg.afterbuy.de , though you will need to fit your own tap if needed. the dial thermometer is eye candy and not very useful in fact would be more of a hinderence for a simple biab brew technique getting in the way or worse ripping the bag.. IMHO Your better off with an accurate thermometer that looks less snazzy Accurate Mechanical dial thermometers that you can calibrate are far from cheap while a £3 digital thermometer can read true +/- 1c ..
ist update for months n months..
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Coming Soon Lots planned for the near future nowt for the immediate
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
If space is an issue why not scale it down a bit. What i have done recently is scaled it down to 10l batches using the biab method. I have then converted my 50l stainless boiler from gas to electric. By having the smaller amount of wort to boil i can get away with one element so no extension leads etc..
By brewing the smaller amounts i seem to be brewing more often, i put this down to the fact i am not using three 50l vessels any more only one vessel is used so cleaning up takes alot less time which in turn makes me want to brew more.
Another benefit is that i am able to experiment with different recipes more that if i am brewing larger batches, well for me anyway.
By brewing the smaller amounts i seem to be brewing more often, i put this down to the fact i am not using three 50l vessels any more only one vessel is used so cleaning up takes alot less time which in turn makes me want to brew more.
Another benefit is that i am able to experiment with different recipes more that if i am brewing larger batches, well for me anyway.
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
It's okay to run two elements from the same ring circuit, as long as you plug each element into a separate socket. (Not a double socket; two physically separate sockets.) Two 2.4kW elements (say) will draw a total of 20 Amps. A domestic ring circuit can handle up to 32 Amps. To be safe, don't use the kettle/dishwasher/microwave at the same time.
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Good point. I'm missing brewing - three months today, 'cos I filled all five of my kegs and still have plenty left. I should probably sell a couple.chefgage wrote:why not scale it down a bit.
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
I went with a 50L Bergland stock pot and a Home Brew Builder 3kw ripple element, only draws 13amps and works a charm through the control panel.
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
I slightly prefer using gas-powered kettles, for similar reasons to people liking gas hobs in the kitchen; its easy and responsive to control. It also avoids various reliability issues with elements or limitations on mains power-supply capacity that some people have.
But gas is something of a faff to deal with, has issues with drafts and needs ventilation etc, so electricity is nicer to deal with and considerably better (IMO) for indoor situations or where you may want to automate control. If on a half decent electrical supply tariff, the running costs are cheaper too.
But gas is something of a faff to deal with, has issues with drafts and needs ventilation etc, so electricity is nicer to deal with and considerably better (IMO) for indoor situations or where you may want to automate control. If on a half decent electrical supply tariff, the running costs are cheaper too.
Last edited by Kev888 on Wed Feb 01, 2017 10:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Particularly if you run out mid boil.Kev888 wrote:
But gas is something of a faff to deal with, has issues with drafts and needs ventilation etc.
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
If space is an issue then consider Biab most of the kit will pack back into the boiler/kettel when not in use. I'm haply doing 23 litre batches using only 1 x 3 Kw element and a 13 A supply.
I can't really understand why anybody would want to use gas when electricity is cheaper and much more convenient and far easier to manage with feedback control. I don't have a fully automated system but when I set a temperature the controls will maintain it with out me having to intervene.
Good luck with whatever you decide. aamcle
I can't really understand why anybody would want to use gas when electricity is cheaper and much more convenient and far easier to manage with feedback control. I don't have a fully automated system but when I set a temperature the controls will maintain it with out me having to intervene.
Good luck with whatever you decide. aamcle
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Cheers for the replies! Scaling down in size makes a lot of sense but I'd still like to be able to brew a full 20 litres or so if I fancied it.
I'm leaning towards a 33L / 35L stock pot and probably run two elements- at least then you have a spare if one goes tits.
When not in use I can use the pot for storing bits and bobs. Anything any bigger and the misses would kill me!
I'm leaning towards a 33L / 35L stock pot and probably run two elements- at least then you have a spare if one goes tits.
When not in use I can use the pot for storing bits and bobs. Anything any bigger and the misses would kill me!
Cheers and gone,
Mozza
Mozza
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
I was gonna ask if they're worth the money!Kyle_T wrote:I went with a 50L Bergland stock pot and a Home Brew Builder 3kw ripple element, only draws 13amps and works a charm through the control panel.
They do look the business!
Cheers and gone,
Mozza
Mozza
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
That was my fear so I always had a spare bottle ready just in case. My other problem with gas is as I brew in the kitchen (at the minute but I am converting an outhouse into a brewery/bar/seating area - I have a thread about that) I have to then take the 50l pot with the wort in out to the garage which is at the bottom of my garden and then back again when its boiled. Thats whats put me off brewing more often. Now I have moved to electric everythings done in the same place so no more moving large vessels of liquid down he driveorlando wrote:Particularly if you run out mid boil.Kev888 wrote:
But gas is something of a faff to deal with, has issues with drafts and needs ventilation etc.
Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Where's the cheapest place to buy a 30-35 litre stock pot? Looking on eBay but not a lot on there?
I'm good with DIY so tempted to assemble everything myself
I'm good with DIY so tempted to assemble everything myself
Cheers and gone,
Mozza
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Re: Upgrade - advice needed please
Did you not see this from fil?mozza wrote:Where's the cheapest place to buy a 30-35 litre stock pot? Looking on eBay but not a lot on there?
I'm good with DIY so tempted to assemble everything myself
buying the stockpots direct from the ebay.fr suplier will save you a lot of cash(50-60%) catering-portal.bergland@msg.afterbuy.de , though you will need to fit your own tap if needed.
I am "The Little Red Brooster"
Fermenting:
Conditioning:
Drinking: Southwold Again,
Up Next: John Barleycorn (Barley Wine)
Planning: Winter drinking Beer
Fermenting:
Conditioning:
Drinking: Southwold Again,
Up Next: John Barleycorn (Barley Wine)
Planning: Winter drinking Beer