PaulCa
Regular.
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2012
- Messages
- 311
- Reaction score
- 6
Lets say you have a thermostatically controlled wort boiler.
If you leave the element at full it will be on all the time and water will never get to be more than boiling. It will never be above 100*C. No mater how powerful your boiler is.
But, based on the latent heat capacity of water, any energy applied at 100*C results in evaporation. The wort remains 100C.
All that maters is the amount of energy you need to supply to maintain a temp of 100C, after loses. Any more energy will result in evaporation.
So, how do you configure a setup to boil, but only boil a volume of water?
Wort that is boiling is 100C (give or take a few tenths maybe), it might take only 1Kw to keep that boil, but your boiler provides 3Kw. Your choices are, boil the wort with +2kw of evaporation power or turn the termostat down and not get a rolling boil.
EDIT: Gas users can turn down the propane valve to produce a lower amount of heat and match the point at which it just boils. Electric boiler users are kinda screwed.
If you leave the element at full it will be on all the time and water will never get to be more than boiling. It will never be above 100*C. No mater how powerful your boiler is.
But, based on the latent heat capacity of water, any energy applied at 100*C results in evaporation. The wort remains 100C.
All that maters is the amount of energy you need to supply to maintain a temp of 100C, after loses. Any more energy will result in evaporation.
So, how do you configure a setup to boil, but only boil a volume of water?
Wort that is boiling is 100C (give or take a few tenths maybe), it might take only 1Kw to keep that boil, but your boiler provides 3Kw. Your choices are, boil the wort with +2kw of evaporation power or turn the termostat down and not get a rolling boil.
EDIT: Gas users can turn down the propane valve to produce a lower amount of heat and match the point at which it just boils. Electric boiler users are kinda screwed.