Kronos
Well-Known Member
I am seriously thinking about building myself a fridge fermenter, can anyone recommend a suitable fridge and instructions for building one and a link to a good build on YouTube.
Just done this seems to work great. Not had chance to brew in it yet. Will this week though
Just ordering the Inkbird ITC-308 unit, is a 60 watt greenhouse heater adequate for the job or does it need to be higher or lower in wattage.Get yourself an old fridge off Gumtree for �ã20. Get an Inkbird ITC-308 - �ã27 on Amazon at the moment. Get a cheap greenhouse heater - �ã13 or so. Put the greenhouse heater inside the fridge and plug it into the "heat" socket on the Inkbird. Plug the fridge into the "cold" socket on the Inkbird. Put the Inkbird temperature probe inside the fridge (better still tape it to the FV you're putting in the fridge). Plug the Inkbird into the wall and set it as per the instructions to the temperature required. Voila, fridge fermenter. Nothing else to it.
Cheers Graz, I will order a 45W heater.No higher than 60W, in fact I have 60W in both mine and I get an overshoot in the smaller fridge (both undercounter larder type jobbies), in retrospect a 40W probably would have been fine. Don't use a fan either, convection works for me.
Thank you, that's another question answered.:thumb:At the recommendation of others on here I've taped "pocket" of bubblewrap onto the side of the FV then popped the temperature probe in there so it's in contact with the FV, giving an accurate FV temperature without being in direct contact with ambient temperature air. It seems to work very well.
Another question.
Is it best to raise the fridge off the floor by two or three feet so it makes it easy to transfer the wort to another FV or barrel when it has finished fermenting.
Get yourself an old fridge off Gumtree for �ã20. Get an Inkbird ITC-308 - �ã27 on Amazon at the moment. Get a cheap greenhouse heater - �ã13 or so. Put the greenhouse heater inside the fridge and plug it into the "heat" socket on the Inkbird. Plug the fridge into the "cold" socket on the Inkbird. Put the Inkbird temperature probe inside the fridge (better still tape it to the FV you're putting in the fridge). Plug the Inkbird into the wall and set it as per the instructions to the temperature required. Voila, fridge fermenter. Nothing else to it.
Is it best to tape the temperature gauge to the fermenting bin or just leave it loose in the fridge.
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