barneey wrote:Kev a few questions,
1) What size French stock pots did you have in mind for the build?
2) Were you going to use a solar pump?
3) Upward or downward flow through the mash?
EDIT I was thinking along the lines of a 50ltr thermo (400mm dia internally) with either a 33 or 21 ltr internal single skin pot ( 350 or 300mm diameter internally).
Regards
Hi,
Its very early days yet - really just thinking of options and possibilities but so far:
1. Well I bought some 100L ones (intended for the bigger setup) so it would probably make sense to use one of those, maybe turning the other into a very spacious FV. By my mental calculations (which I'd have to check) a decently high gravity brew of a double-corny brew length would reach around 80L with all the grain and liquor together so a 100L pot seems reasonable.
That said, I'm probably mainly going to be doing 1-corny brew lengths so a 50L tank would probably be more suitable for me day-to-day, but I already have the 100L pot and actually I'm thinking that it would be nice to retain at least the option of 2-corny batches, for example when leading up to 'events' where I'm not the only drinker. If it works out well then I could probably dis-band my existing 4-corny setup, whereas I'd be reluctant if my only other option was 1-corny. I may have inner pots of different sizes for the two brew-lengths, or some way of adjusting the overflow/outlet height.
I'd been imagining that the next pot down (70L) for the inner basket would be the obvious choice, giving me about 25mm clearance, but I've not really got that far in planning yet so its just a vague thought. Its also possible that my existing 120L boiler may snugly take a 100l french pot inside it, if for some reason that turns out to be a desirable thing to do, but I suspect the grain bed would be very wide and shallow for 1-corny brews.
2. Yes I may well use solar pumps; I have three 14w ones I bought for the big setup so could even run them in parallel or something; I like that they're so quiet and can be sanitised by boiling water/wort. I'd been thinking faster was better for step mashing and so on, so was wandering about the Stuart Turner RG pump, but it can't take boiling (officially) and having seen that upward sparging can still stick somewhat (see my post above) I'm now thinking if I buy a new pump it perhaps should be more modest speed, maybe the march may 809; if necessary to avoid sticking I could probably use a coarser grain filter with that than I could with solar pumps. I had considered that a self-priming pump with suction could possibly get over different batch sizes being different heights and also avoid the splashing down, by simply sucking the wort out upwards, but I've not thought that through much yet and anyway I can't find any food-grade/boiling-capable ones.
3. I liked the idea of upward recirculation making use of gravity rather than being hindered by it, but having seen to my surprise that the upper filter can still block I want to establish if its worth it for the extra complication - e.g. if it encourages smaller lighter bits to float up past the grain instead of the grain itself being a filter for them it may have only small benefits. If so, possibly one could trap the grain at a volume that doesn't let it float so loosely in spite of the large liquid ratio, or something. I don't know how i'd find any of this out without quite time consuming trials though..
Cheers
Kev