Not been on in a while , busy with new job and building brew shed


+1 I use the thermowell during primary, after discovering that the temperature in the wort was as much as 4 degrees higher than the ambient. Then I pull the probe out once primary is finished and the yeast is too tired to heat things up!Haydnexport wrote:That's interesting , Id have thought the lag between ambient and liquid temp too great , i have mine, 3 working via thermowell as the heat generated by the yeast i thought would raise the temperature above ambient?
Disagree.Andy wrote:OK. Don't put the probe in a thermowell then.
Exactly.Andy wrote:The wort volume is very large and will take some time for the temperature to adjust to reflect the heating/cooling being applied.
No it won't. The thermal mass of the air in the fridge and the cold part of the fridge body is naff all compared to that of even a modest volume of wort, so there is very little potential to overshoot by any significant amount.Andy wrote:This will lead to over heating / cooling.
If you don't have the luxury of a thermowell this is good enough, but when you consider that fermentation creates heat, you'll often be behind (i.e. too warm) with this approach. Without a thermowell I would suggest the poor man's equivalent of securing the temperature sensor to the outside of the fermentation vessel with bubble wrap on the outside to make it measure the FV temperature more accurately.Andy wrote:Much better to set the ambient fridge temp and let everything settle to a common temperature over time.