thanks for the advice, I’m thinking long term about getting maxi chiller, just wanted to see if I could set something up that would work before investing in a maxi chiller. From what I’ve read most people add stainless steel directly inside the fermenter, I wanted to try and keep away from this to prevent risk of infection and reduce the extra cleaning.
I’m happy to put a hole in the fridge door to run in, how much copper tubing / micro bore pipe would I need to make it effective the vessel is 100l with a circumstance of i think 160 cm. even with a maxi chiller I could use the same pipe set up?
Not sure I understand what you meaning about bringing the pipes in and connecting them up, I don’t have much knowledge about the workings of fridges
ok I can understand wanting to try building something up, I too get a lot of enjoyment from building things & experimenting.
Regarding the chiller please accept these are only ideas I've not tried doing this, but hopefully here is a better explanation of what I'm thinking & what I'd try if I was doing this myself.
I've attached a quick sketch, a picture being worth a thousand words & all that. Copper microbore tube is sold in 10m lengths which you could obviously join to make longer if you wished. But say you were to use one 10m length for each heat exchanger. (I can't see any good way to estimate or calculate whether this is enough or too much, I think it would have to be done by experiment). If the circumference of your fermenter is 160cm you would get about 6 turns. I think that this should be placed towards the top of the fermenter liquid level to take advantage of convection currents in the liquid (cooler liquid is more dense so falls). The pipe would need to be in good thermal contact with the fermenter, that is a bit of a challenge. That's why immersing the heat exchanger in the liquid would be better but I'd agree a nightmare to clean & sanitise.
Most fridges (but not all) have a radiator on the back which expels unwanted heat into the ambient. Most will have one cold face usually the inside back. This can easily be checked out by turning the fridge on & seeing what parts get cold fastest. If it has an ice box then it might well be the floor of the ice box. In my drawing I've assumed a larder fridge type with no ice box. But anyhow, the cold face is where you would need to site your second heat exchanger. Again it needs to be in good thermal contact. The two heat exchangers would be linked via flexible pipes & using the pump as shown in the diagram. I've assumed that the pipes would pass through a small hole or slot in the door.
I haven't shown any reservoir for the recirculating chiller fluid (water + anti-freeze) but one might be necessary to avoid air blocks. I would assume that you would use your temperature controller to turn on the fridge and the recirculation pump when chilling was required.
I suspect that the hardest part of all this will be to get good thermal contact of heat exchanger 1 to the fermenter and HE2 to the fridge cold face. The consequence of poor thermal contact would be that the fridge will need to work harder i.e. be on for longer, the result probably being a tendency to freeze up.
I hope that makes it clearer, but please take it all with a pinch of salt. I think that it will take a lot of experimentation to get it to work properly and by the time it's finished you will be the expert in the field!
Good luck with the project & have fun.