peterpiper
Regular.
Just wondering if this sounds practical, or if anyone's come across any alternative methods?
I'm thinking of putting a silicone hose on the tap, to act as a second recirculation path, going around outside of the malt pipe to circulate water from the dead space there.
At the moment I alternate the existing hose between recirculation through the mash, and being poked into one of the lifting holes ('outside circulation'). For two reasons:
1)
After a stir during grain in, I let the bed rest, while the grains to swell up. For maybe 40- 60min, before recirculating through the mash. Earlier seems to flush out flour, and risk getting a stuck mash (especially with wheat beers).
Outside circulation at max flow, while the bed is resting, helps greatly with getting to or maintaining temperature. Instead of the mash being heated from just the bottom end, there's heat from all round as well.
2)
Theres a lot of 'dead' water sitting between outside of the malt pipe (O.D. 27cm), and the wall (I.D. 30cm). With a 27l total mash volume, height of water against unperforated pipe, is around 30cm.
So the dead volume is around 3.142 x 28.5 x 1.5 x 30 = 4030 cm³ or just over 4l.
I'd seen a post from someone who, after the mash finished, tried siphoning out the water from the gap (not this model). It still looked like tap water!
Mash efficiency should be much better if the dead space water is properly recirculated in some way, rather than just relying on convection.
You'd then have, say the full 20l of mash water being used, rather than just 16 of the 20. The 16l, being higher SG (would extract fewer sugars) and just be mixed with the mostly unused 4l when the malt pipe is lifted.
A second recirculation pipe, coming from the tap, would mean you then have two valves to control how the recirculation flow is divided.
A snag would be difficulty in draining the extra pipe. Would maybe want a dish on the floor. A danger or worry, would be the pipe falling down, if left running while unattended.
But I'm also considering re-plumbing the tap, to before pump, in case of any pump blockage. So might, wait until sure I'm not getting any late blockages (using a hop spider).
Alternatives might be some sort of T piece on the existing hose, or just hoping that fast recirculation (late on) will overflow through the lift holes. But that tends to carry some grain down, even if using the top screen.
It doesn't take much grain, for the tannins extracted during boil to cause noticeable astringency.
Suppose a stainless barbed T or Y connector, with different branch sizes giving unequal flows, would be simpler than adding extra valves.
Pipes could then go: both to mash; both to outside; slow to mash & fast outside; or slow to outside & fast to mash.
Probable downside, would be connector not fitting through lid hole.
Or if anyone's already tried it, do equal size branches work well?
I'm thinking of putting a silicone hose on the tap, to act as a second recirculation path, going around outside of the malt pipe to circulate water from the dead space there.
At the moment I alternate the existing hose between recirculation through the mash, and being poked into one of the lifting holes ('outside circulation'). For two reasons:
1)
After a stir during grain in, I let the bed rest, while the grains to swell up. For maybe 40- 60min, before recirculating through the mash. Earlier seems to flush out flour, and risk getting a stuck mash (especially with wheat beers).
Outside circulation at max flow, while the bed is resting, helps greatly with getting to or maintaining temperature. Instead of the mash being heated from just the bottom end, there's heat from all round as well.
2)
Theres a lot of 'dead' water sitting between outside of the malt pipe (O.D. 27cm), and the wall (I.D. 30cm). With a 27l total mash volume, height of water against unperforated pipe, is around 30cm.
So the dead volume is around 3.142 x 28.5 x 1.5 x 30 = 4030 cm³ or just over 4l.
I'd seen a post from someone who, after the mash finished, tried siphoning out the water from the gap (not this model). It still looked like tap water!
Mash efficiency should be much better if the dead space water is properly recirculated in some way, rather than just relying on convection.
You'd then have, say the full 20l of mash water being used, rather than just 16 of the 20. The 16l, being higher SG (would extract fewer sugars) and just be mixed with the mostly unused 4l when the malt pipe is lifted.
A second recirculation pipe, coming from the tap, would mean you then have two valves to control how the recirculation flow is divided.
A snag would be difficulty in draining the extra pipe. Would maybe want a dish on the floor. A danger or worry, would be the pipe falling down, if left running while unattended.
But I'm also considering re-plumbing the tap, to before pump, in case of any pump blockage. So might, wait until sure I'm not getting any late blockages (using a hop spider).
Alternatives might be some sort of T piece on the existing hose, or just hoping that fast recirculation (late on) will overflow through the lift holes. But that tends to carry some grain down, even if using the top screen.
It doesn't take much grain, for the tannins extracted during boil to cause noticeable astringency.
Suppose a stainless barbed T or Y connector, with different branch sizes giving unequal flows, would be simpler than adding extra valves.
Pipes could then go: both to mash; both to outside; slow to mash & fast outside; or slow to outside & fast to mash.
Probable downside, would be connector not fitting through lid hole.
Or if anyone's already tried it, do equal size branches work well?