What's the biggest grain bill anyone's ever mashed in their ace?? Wanting to do an imperial stout on thurs but it's a grain bill of about 11kg so guessing I'm gonna have to split it or do a smaller batch?
What's the biggest grain bill anyone's ever mashed in their ace?? Wanting to do an imperial stout on thurs but it's a grain bill of about 11kg so guessing I'm gonna have to split it or do a smaller batch?
I normally do half that but imagine 7kg would be fine.
Alloys commonly used for electrical soldering are 60/40 Sn-Pb, which melts at 188 ðC (370 ðF), and 63/37 Sn-Pb used principally in electrical/electronic work. 63/37 is a eutectic alloy of these metals, which: has the lowest melting point (183 ðC or 361 ðF) of all the tin-lead alloys;
difficult to tell from a 2d pic but as long as the element core is isolated from the metal covering then it will be fine,
I dont know about soldering however? google provided this:_
Reason i checked was most element connections ive seen and ive pulled quite a few element housings out and apart hehe generally use mechanical connections, i would expect temps to remain well below 180C :)
you can probably ebay a heat proof non conducting epoxy to replace the cracked off ceramic, the same sort of stuff they back fill the SSRS with
Which Pid are you using, I use the sestos pids which seem pretty good to me,,
Beercat you have done the same as I did except I ground the connector block down a bit to get the screw further down the element stub, your stub does look slightly shorter than mine but as long as you still have some of the red material left you should be fine. If you have a multimeter put it on megohms and test the resistance between the terminal and earth,power off as course. Better still when you have finished get it PAT TESTED.
Hi!Would anyone kindly give me an idiots guide to do a recirculating mash in my ace boiler? Is it just pipe from tap to pump then back in top of boiler?
Hi!
The overall system is silicon hose from the ball valve tap on the ACE to the inflow on the pump. The outflow from the pump has another ball valve tap; this is the flow control. From there silicon hose into the top of the ACE.
The method: Both taps closed; attach the hose from the ACE tap to the pump inflow. Open the tap on the ACE. Gradually open the flow control until the pump is primed, i.e, when wort flows out of the outflow. Close the flow control tap and attach the hose that goes into the top of the ACE. Switch on the pump and open the flow control until wort is flowing gently back into the top of the ACE.
Magnetic drive pumps can be run fully primed with no outflow, but they must never be run dry.
I've posted a short video of the "wet" run of the system (it's the HLT, not the ACE, but shows the configuration).
https://youtu.be/Qz1uzcsa0mI
Would anyone kindly give me an idiots guide to do a recirculating mash in my ace boiler? Is it just pipe from tap to pump then back in top of boiler?
Can anybody tell me if you can run the ace boiler on an Inkbird ITC-308S? I tried today to use them both to keep sparge water at temp. I set the target for 76úC and at about 40úC the Inkbird bleeped, showed "Err" and shut the boiler off and rest all of it's settings. I tried twice with same result and end up just using it as a thermometer. My Ace boilers thermostat is way out. My boiler is the 1600w version so is below the Inkbirds 2200w rating. Any ideas?
@Bigcol & @Donchiquon Thought i would let you know since i took my pump apart and cleaned it out(no easy job) i can recirculate with ease. No wonder if was hard to bleed before. Was totally blocked up. I modified the Y strainer i bought by ripping out the small micron mesh and now seems to work fine. Was only my first run though and doubtful if its necessary. It took my slow brain a while to figure what you mean to tipping it to release the air. Now its unblocked just shoots out. Still contemplating drilling a hole in the lid to put the hose through to minimise heat loss. I will get my leccy mate to test my work on wiring up the smaller element as well sometime soon.
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