evanvine
Landlord.
Good god, some one's agreed with me!
Is this something to do with your santa hat being red and not black Alistair? :whistle:
Is this something to do with your santa hat being red and not black Alistair? :whistle:
We must meet up for a pint and a chat about brewing!Incidentally, Evanvine, we must nearly be neighbours, I live near kings mill!
I use exactly the same method OJ, only with a 150w heater!Its in a square plastic drawer water bath
andyakameatloaf said:I don't see myself switching from this method unless I decide to try to lager (Y)
I never knew that EV, I will stand it up in future. :thumb: I never knew about thermometers getting bubbles if you lay them down either, thought it was just a fault.I've been brewing for 40 years and still learning tricks! :thumb:evanvine said:I use exactly the same method OJ, only with a 150w heater!Its in a square plastic drawer water bath
It might be worth mentioning here that aquarium glass tube heaters containing both heater and thermostat in the same tube are designed to be used horizontally!
As a marine reef keeper myself, for the last 19 years (700li sps with fish) I have never had a fish burn itself on a heater. The outside temp of the heater is ...whatever you set it to, try it, touch the heater, it not hot (26oC), it will be warmer than the surrounding water column, but not enough to damage any yeast in a fermenting brew.Welsh_Wizard said:Boost - Coming from a saltwater marine side initially (random i know), immersion heaters were always 'wrapped' in a protective cover to stop fish/coral from burning themselves on the unit - how could you possibly protect yeast from touching the glass and burning themselves to smithereens's??? Wouldn't that then leave you with a perpetual cycle of frazzled yeast as they convected around the vessel and touched the glass?? I would hazard a guess that after a few hours of heating, especially if the outside temp' is cool (therefore the heater is constantly heating), your yeast wouldn't last too long !!
What have you got against putting your FV in a metal bath (like you could buy from a garden centre to bath your dog!!) and putting one or two decent heaters in the water then submerging the FV up to the bottle neck/rim ?? Same effect i would have thought but with a considerably more stable and even heat dispersion.
WW
Please, please, please used a RCDboost said:I actually ended up with the fv in a tub after all. The fish tank heater came with a sealed type plug and I didn't have a spare normal plug, so I could cut the plug off to feed it through the lid. I came across a perfectly sized tub in the garage that is just enough wider than the fv to fit the heater in. I've insulated the sides with a camping mat and the top and bottom with some polystyrene. It works amazingly well! First cider is bottled and second is brewing :)
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