I have an issue that needs to be fixed before I short circuit the electrics in my house, followed by the cicuit board inside my missus' head, which will inevitably be followed by the untimely death of my electric powered brewing career.
Sometimes my all grain brews go mostly to plan. I hit the right OG/Litre numbers, my efficiency and deadspace etc. is calculated correctly enough, thanks to Brewers Friend.
However, I have a problem that can **** things up royally that even BF can't predict... my electrics seem to want to destroy my brew day at any given opportunity!!!
I have a 50L steel kettle with two elements. I bought this all together from Brew Builder and its a tidy piece of kit. I bought the pot, elements, cables etc. all together, but I have issues most times I brew, which I am putting down to the extension leads.
I brew outside (at least I always boil my wort outside) and this means I need extension leads. One was (was, because it wont be used again after today) a roll up, 4 plug extension lead. I had another issue before with this, which I found was becuase I hadn't unravelled it, which caused an extremely hot unit and a near melting plug.
Another time, the plug of the black cable the goes to the unit melted and fried the fuse, which I replaced and carried on brewing with.
Today, the plug was in the roll up extension lead (fully unravelled this time) and I saw smoke. I flipped the switch at the wall to turn this off, and pulled the plug out of the melting extension lead unit which was frankly a deathtrap. A huge hole had melted in the unit and if I had not realised, I dont know what would have happened. The plug from the element was also unusable as it had melted...
When I finished the brew, I tried to pull out the cable from the other element, this had glued itself to element in the kettle... it literally had to be wedged away as it had melted onto the prongs from the element.
What is going wrong?
Do you get this too?
If there are high voltage extenion leads and kettle leads I should be using, let me know so I can get them before its too late!
Sometimes my all grain brews go mostly to plan. I hit the right OG/Litre numbers, my efficiency and deadspace etc. is calculated correctly enough, thanks to Brewers Friend.
However, I have a problem that can **** things up royally that even BF can't predict... my electrics seem to want to destroy my brew day at any given opportunity!!!
I have a 50L steel kettle with two elements. I bought this all together from Brew Builder and its a tidy piece of kit. I bought the pot, elements, cables etc. all together, but I have issues most times I brew, which I am putting down to the extension leads.
I brew outside (at least I always boil my wort outside) and this means I need extension leads. One was (was, because it wont be used again after today) a roll up, 4 plug extension lead. I had another issue before with this, which I found was becuase I hadn't unravelled it, which caused an extremely hot unit and a near melting plug.
Another time, the plug of the black cable the goes to the unit melted and fried the fuse, which I replaced and carried on brewing with.
Today, the plug was in the roll up extension lead (fully unravelled this time) and I saw smoke. I flipped the switch at the wall to turn this off, and pulled the plug out of the melting extension lead unit which was frankly a deathtrap. A huge hole had melted in the unit and if I had not realised, I dont know what would have happened. The plug from the element was also unusable as it had melted...
When I finished the brew, I tried to pull out the cable from the other element, this had glued itself to element in the kettle... it literally had to be wedged away as it had melted onto the prongs from the element.
What is going wrong?
Do you get this too?
If there are high voltage extenion leads and kettle leads I should be using, let me know so I can get them before its too late!