Barone
Active Member
I'm curious to hear from folks who don't use the top plate in their BZ gen 4 . What do you do instead to get an even distribution of recirculating wort over the grain bed?
Not a brewzilla user but on my all in one I've started using this and it's great.I'm curious to hear from folks who don't use the top plate in their BZ gen 4 . What do you do instead to get an even distribution of recirculating wort over the grain bed?
I'm curious to hear from folks who don't use the top plate in their BZ gen 4 . What do you do instead to get an even distribution of recirculating wort over the grain bed?
Was the pump working at full speed? Or had you throttled it with the ball valve / pump percentage setting?I just had a bit of a weird brew day with my BZ4, and I'm not even sure if this was a problem of the BZ4.
The pump kept blocking, a lot, and the temperature was crazy all over the place. When I finally finished the mash, I pulled the grain basket up and found the wort to be running incredibly slowly through the grain, if at all. Usually gravity does it's job, and it instantly starts falling through, but I had to stir the grain to get it to fall. This was my third brew, and this is the first time it happened. I now realise the pump blocking wasn't blocking at all, but actually due to a lack of wort to pump falling below the grain bed. The temperature variation was probably due to the lack of wort down by the temp sensor as well. I still managed to keep a constant temperature within the grain bed however, based on my external thermometer, and achieved 78% BH efficiency.
Has this happened to anybody else before? I used rice hulls within the mash and so expected more flow within it, and there was nothing particularly different about the grind. Very strange.
This seems strange . Did you have anything unusual in the grist eg. wheat? I actually find this worrying because the heaters will have been heating the bottom of the kettle even when it may have been short of liquid. It sound like the grains were compacted did you have the top plate on during the mash? I personally would not do that because I feel that would lead to compaction of the grain bed. I think it is a good idea to stir the mash to be honest but it really should not be obligatory.I just had a bit of a weird brew day with my BZ4, and I'm not even sure if this was a problem of the BZ4.
The pump kept blocking, a lot, and the temperature was crazy all over the place. When I finally finished the mash, I pulled the grain basket up and found the wort to be running incredibly slowly through the grain, if at all. Usually gravity does it's job, and it instantly starts falling through, but I had to stir the grain to get it to fall. This was my third brew, and this is the first time it happened. I now realise the pump blocking wasn't blocking at all, but actually due to a lack of wort to pump falling below the grain bed. The temperature variation was probably due to the lack of wort down by the temp sensor as well. I still managed to keep a constant temperature within the grain bed however, based on my external thermometer, and achieved 78% BH efficiency.
Has this happened to anybody else before? I used rice hulls within the mash and so expected more flow within it, and there was nothing particularly different about the grind. Very strange.
The mash thickness was 3.8 l/kg.
I don't think my grist was particularly weird - pale ale (59.5%), vienna (18%), munich (12%), and cara 50 (10.5%). I can't remember where I got this from, I'm fairly use it was online I found it somewhere, and just changed the hop additions.
I initially had the top plate on, but then took it off about 20 minutes into the mash.
I stirred it a lot. I've learned that stirring the mash is quite important in a BZ4 to achieve a good efficiency.
It was a recipe I got through GetErBrewed custom recipe kit creator, and I've never had problems with their crushed grain before.
So yeah, it's really quite strange because there's nothing I can see that would have caused this, unless it was the recipe?
I've only used mine once (planning second go tomorrow) and my mash was quite thick too but circulation never stopped and temperature was stable. I'm planning on a more liquid mash tomorrow.I just had a bit of a weird brew day with my BZ4, and I'm not even sure if this was a problem of the BZ4.
The pump kept blocking, a lot, and the temperature was crazy all over the place. When I finally finished the mash, I pulled the grain basket up and found the wort to be running incredibly slowly through the grain, if at all. Usually gravity does it's job, and it instantly starts falling through, but I had to stir the grain to get it to fall. This was my third brew, and this is the first time it happened. I now realise the pump blocking wasn't blocking at all, but actually due to a lack of wort to pump falling below the grain bed. The temperature variation was probably due to the lack of wort down by the temp sensor as well. I still managed to keep a constant temperature within the grain bed however, based on my external thermometer, and achieved 78% BH efficiency.
Has this happened to anybody else before? I used rice hulls within the mash and so expected more flow within it, and there was nothing particularly different about the grind. Very strange.
Any change you'd be able to share how you made this? I've been looking around for something to use to distribute reciculated wort better.I use a homemade spray head which is held above the mash to spread the flow out so as the mash can settle better
I think most of the problems with the BZ4 are user created infact if you spend some time getting to understand how it works it can be used with very little problems.
The one with the stuck mash is probably down to crush of the grain or maybe the settling of the sack in transit, that I can only guess as the user did not say how it was crushed etc.
Now overshoots is usually down to not throttling the heating element down to 40% or less during mash as a element on full power does not stop heating even when power is no longer there it will hold the heat and carry on transmitting this heat for quite a while which will create a overshoot.
I use the lower power on the mash and have used cornflakes and rice together with standard grain and after a couple of stirs after the initial doughing in it will settle to a pretty good stable temp, also the BZ4 has a smaller amount of wort in the deadspace than most so it is critical to get a good mash flow through or this will create hotspots.
I have also found that the BHE is better with the BZ4 than my previous AIO getting at least a 5% increase and sometimes more.
My one piece of advice for all BZ4 users is to get the Rapt temp controller so that you are measuring the mash and not the deadspace wort temp which is what most other AIO's do I see this as a major improvement in mashing temps
This is pretty genius. I've got one lying somewhere as well so I'll give that a shot. It shouldn't be hard to suspend it through the hole in the lid as well.I made a simple a spray head out of a turkeybaster bulb the thing that you squeeze to suck up the wort into it to get a sample.
You can purchase sprayheads meant for the job but I just happened to have a old baster bulb lying around and just drilled some holes in it which I then attach to the silcone hose and suspend it above the grain bed
How did you manage to calibrate the PID? I've had a look but I've got no idea what any of the abbreviations are. Was there a particular video or post that spells it out for idiots?With the PID settings properly calibrated
I think most of the problems with the BZ4 are user created infact if you spend some time getting to understand how it works it can be used with very little problems.
The one with the stuck mash is probably down to crush of the grain or maybe the settling of the sack in transit, that I can only guess as the user did not say how it was crushed etc.
Now overshoots is usually down to not throttling the heating element down to 40% or less during mash as a element on full power does not stop heating even when power is no longer there it will hold the heat and carry on transmitting this heat for quite a while which will create a overshoot.
I use the lower power on the mash and have used cornflakes and rice together with standard grain and after a couple of stirs after the initial doughing in it will settle to a pretty good stable temp, also the BZ4 has a smaller amount of wort in the deadspace than most so it is critical to get a good mash flow through or this will create hotspots.
I have also found that the BHE is better with the BZ4 than my previous AIO getting at least a 5% increase and sometimes more.
My one piece of advice for all BZ4 users is to get the Rapt temp controller so that you are measuring the mash and not the deadspace wort temp which is what most other AIO's do I see this as a major improvement in mashing temps
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