Speed of Sparge
Speed of Sparge
Hello,
When sparging from my converted coolbox I open the tap fully (recirculating the first 4L via a jug). This means my sparge time is short at 15-20mins for 6kg to 36L. It doesn't seem to affect my calculations with regard to water volume required or OG.
If I slow down the sparge process by reducing outflow at the tap I guess a more prolonged wash of the grains may lead to a more concentrated wort. But are there any problems I'm inviting by sparging so quick?
The last brew (all pale perle) fair flew through, and has fermented well so far, just wondered if I was lining myself up for haze issues or other probs?
At what flow rate do you sparge? I'm about 1.8 to 2.5L/min.
When sparging from my converted coolbox I open the tap fully (recirculating the first 4L via a jug). This means my sparge time is short at 15-20mins for 6kg to 36L. It doesn't seem to affect my calculations with regard to water volume required or OG.
If I slow down the sparge process by reducing outflow at the tap I guess a more prolonged wash of the grains may lead to a more concentrated wort. But are there any problems I'm inviting by sparging so quick?
The last brew (all pale perle) fair flew through, and has fermented well so far, just wondered if I was lining myself up for haze issues or other probs?
At what flow rate do you sparge? I'm about 1.8 to 2.5L/min.
- Aleman
- It's definitely Lock In Time
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Last brew was 95 L in 30 minutes, puts me at about 3L per minute.
FWIW I remember Dan Listerman (Of Spiny Sparger fame) saying that the spiny was designed to deliver 5 (US) gallons of water over 45 minutes. (At 1ft of head) Personally there is no way I would want to wait that long, as with 85+ Litres to go through I would be looking at a THREE HOUR! Sparge
With a slow sparge your efficiency does increase, mine was in the 90+% mark, but I make better beer now its fallen back to 75-80%
FWIW I remember Dan Listerman (Of Spiny Sparger fame) saying that the spiny was designed to deliver 5 (US) gallons of water over 45 minutes. (At 1ft of head) Personally there is no way I would want to wait that long, as with 85+ Litres to go through I would be looking at a THREE HOUR! Sparge
With a slow sparge your efficiency does increase, mine was in the 90+% mark, but I make better beer now its fallen back to 75-80%
- spearmint-wino
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SiH. - I take it you batch sparge? I could try and fly-sparge that fast but I don't think it's physically possible! 

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- spearmint-wino
- CBA prizewinner 2007
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Yeah I guess you would, although all the info I've read says to try and go for a long fly-sparge - 45 mins or more...?



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- spearmint-wino
- CBA prizewinner 2007
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Sat Mar 10, 2007 9:08 am
- Location: Nunhead, Sarf Lahndun
Aye quite right, although anything that would knock some time off a brewday would be a bonus
. That might have to wait until I go batch-sparge at some point in the dim & distant future (when my spinny sparger breaks)

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I fell into what I do, I planned to use a spinny but H&G couldn't supply one with my kit in the end so I use PVC tubing from my HLT tap moved around over the mesh diffuser sitting on top of the grist. Balancing the flow from the HLT with the speed of the MT outflow. Just lately though trying to keep up with the outflow! I keep the MT liquor level up to the top of the grist whilst sparging and am happy that I'm spreading the flow over the diffuser (my efficiency seems OK so no real channelling and bypass). Next time I'll only half open the MT out tap and see if efficiency goes up over the assumedly longer sparge. Just for interest really, I don't want to lengthen the brew day unnecessarily. I think in money terms a 10% increase in efficiency on my scale is pretty irrelavent. A point Mr Edge makes in his article:
http://www.craft brewing.org.uk/technical/extdoc/thedraff.pdf
http://www.craft brewing.org.uk/technical/extdoc/thedraff.pdf