A slightly irritating feature of my setup is not having a separate sparge heater.
It‘s not a problem because I sparge from the Burco. But it does mean I have to collect the wort in a separate bucket so I can’t easily start heating for the boil until after the sparge.
So I was idly wonder whether I could free up the Burco by heating the sparge water ‘in-line’ using my HERMS setup instead, which uses a separate kettle.
I did a few calculations and the results surprised me.
I guess that’s why those ‘on demand’ showers you get in budget hotels tend to be a bit weedy.
However I don’t think the idea is entirely dead in the water. In reality a flow rate of 1.9 litres per minute is too high. At that speed it would go through a typical 16 litre sparge volume in only 8-9 mins, whereas I’d always aim for 20-30 mins spargeing. Granted, the sparge water is probably only running in for about 2/3rds of that time - but we are getting closer to the ballpark here.
The other factor is the starting water temperature. Pre-heating the sparge water in the Burco to something like 40°c during the mash, and then dumping it into a separate bucket to free up the kettle for wort collection would definitely put the required temperature increase within ‘HERMS’ range.
Plenty to think about here…
It‘s not a problem because I sparge from the Burco. But it does mean I have to collect the wort in a separate bucket so I can’t easily start heating for the boil until after the sparge.
So I was idly wonder whether I could free up the Burco by heating the sparge water ‘in-line’ using my HERMS setup instead, which uses a separate kettle.
I did a few calculations and the results surprised me.
- Running one of my little pumps through the counterflow and the sparge arm (which is what I do while recirculating) gives me a flow rate of 1.9 litres/min = 31.7 ml/sec.
- Let’s say I want to raise the sparge water from 12°c to 75°c: a difference of 63 degrees.
I guess that’s why those ‘on demand’ showers you get in budget hotels tend to be a bit weedy.
However I don’t think the idea is entirely dead in the water. In reality a flow rate of 1.9 litres per minute is too high. At that speed it would go through a typical 16 litre sparge volume in only 8-9 mins, whereas I’d always aim for 20-30 mins spargeing. Granted, the sparge water is probably only running in for about 2/3rds of that time - but we are getting closer to the ballpark here.
The other factor is the starting water temperature. Pre-heating the sparge water in the Burco to something like 40°c during the mash, and then dumping it into a separate bucket to free up the kettle for wort collection would definitely put the required temperature increase within ‘HERMS’ range.
Plenty to think about here…
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