You're welcome here's a screenshot of the water report I got from Murphy's for spotless water.Cheers Dave, I’d never heard of that before but I’m in Herne bay so regularly in Canterbury. Thanks for the tip
You're welcome here's a screenshot of the water report I got from Murphy's for spotless water.Cheers Dave, I’d never heard of that before but I’m in Herne bay so regularly in Canterbury. Thanks for the tip
I set the pipe so it's initially 2cm above top of the mash liquid (by twisting recirc arm, with pipe through lid hole), and use this point as a maximum level rise guide, when adjusting recirculation rate. Much more than 15mm can lead to a compacted grain bed. Having a layer of liquid above the grain, should even the flow over whole malt pipe area, better than a top plate etc.i have a quick question...i see some people dont bother with the top plate as it compresses the bed...so do you just have the recirc pipe hanging freely within the mash or fix it so it lays on top of the bed...i assume gravity will make it sink into the bed...does it matter if it sinks into the bed re effective recirculation?
Your figures are interesting, and I'm glad someone else has noticed this happening.Just finished cleaning up from another brew on the Gen 4. I made a 13L batch of saison -- 2.5kg of grains in 10L of mash water -- and decided to experiment with some simple step mashing to try to dial in some numbers. With the loose mash I had the pump around half open with no issues. For context I have the HED plate, jacket and BT thermometer.
Running at 35% power the lower probe showed an overshoot of ~1.5C after the cutoff temp (i.e. if the elements cut out at 62C, the lower probe temp would continue to rise to 63.5C). About 2/3rds of the total overshoot would end up being reflected in the BT probe reading a couple of minutes later. This was unsurprising once I thought about it seeing as the deadspace under the mash is 2.5L so that's a fair chunk of the total mash liquid being overheated.
With my initial allowed temp difference of 4C the overshoot at the top was >3C, which is a bit much as it takes 10 minutes or so for the temp to reduce again. I dialled down the allowed temp difference between the lower probe and target to 1C and the overshoot stayed down at 1-1.5C but for next time I think I'll set the allowed difference to target to 0 for small batches like this.
Anyway, things were learned, beer was made. Efficiency was fine at ~80% and zero other issues.
The beauty of the system is it gives you the flexibility and the information to dial in different setting parameters for different batch volumes.
But that flexibility is what a lot of users have problems getting the grips with.
Hi Peter, I like this idea but you must have stuck with the original pump piping layout ?I now also do 'outer recirculation' at max flow (outside malt pipe via lift hole, while 2nd recirc pipe off tap controls recirc through malt). Full flow, reduces base overshoot (beyond diff setting); shortens overshoot duration; warms grain bed from the side (rather than bed having to heat the surrounding unused static cooler water); the more diluted mash might improve efficiency slightly; full flow can keep flour and small particles in circulation until filtered through grain bed (rather than settling out on base, and burning later).
Hi Peter, I like this idea but you must have stuck with the original pump piping layout ?
Might help if more people reported issues or suggestions to the developers: gitlab.com/rapt.io/public/-/boards/ or RAPT portal - my account - issue tracker. Or comment on existing issues there.
Hi Brewsby, I’m thinking T hose splitter may be a good option to tryIt is an interesting idea. If I did it I'd probably go with a Y/T hose splitter off the recirc arm rather than run another line outside the unit from the tap though.
Change power steps to exactly 500W (20.8%) and 1900W (79%), in place of the 20% and 80%,
It is an interesting idea. If I did it I'd probably go with a Y/T hose splitter off the recirc arm rather than run another line outside the unit from the tap though.
Hadn't noticed, last week, but will check when home.I think this has been updated in the latest firmware release. Also, if you put it into "distillation" mode, then it will only cycle through these "complete" power steps instead of scrolling through the others.
Will be good if diff setting option, eventually gets added in RAPT profile controls.I do not seem to have many issues now with my mash issues. I do set of at 5 diff for reaching mash temp and go 1 degree higher to allow for temp drop when mashing in then drop the diff to 1 for the mash and adjust re-circ flow to suit.
I then raise again to 5 for mash out and boil.
In the UK yes, but do not use a coiled up extension lead.Quick question about brewzilla gen 4 please , searched net and none the wiser, 220v model can it be plugged into ordinary plug socket ,thanks in advance
I used it a couple of times but it was difficult to remove if I wanted to stir the mash so I stopped using it.
I haven’t felt the need for a mid-mash stir for a while so I might try it again.
The 35l model - Yes, the load (heaters max 2400W @ 230V) is well within what a standard UK 13A plug can carry.Quick question about brewzilla gen 4 please , searched net and none the wiser, 220v model can it be plugged into ordinary plug socket ,thanks in advance
Current Capacity and Regulations for Ring Circuits.Also it would be good to know what else was on the circuit, not good if it's in your kitchen and the kettle and toaster are on same ring.
Or you are using your water heater on the same circuit.
Old wiring is also not so good for tolerance.
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