Yes this is another of those fermentation temperature questions. I hope it's a little more different to the norm however!
I'm finishing off my brewery build which is a garden office (galvanised steel shell with timber studwork, proboard and insulation, double glazed windows/doors all along one side). The interior space is quite small: roughly 6m long, 4m wide, 2m high.
I have a 100L 3-vessel system and I'm thinking about fermenters to match. I can only get 20L at a time into my fermentation chamber, so it's time to start seriously thinking about how to do temperature control. The unit gets quite hot: last week it got up to the high-thirties which is not good for the life of the compressors in my freezer and fridge out there. It also rules out ambient fermentation of anything except kveik beers and saisons in the summer. It gets cold in winter but always stays comfortably above freezing - the insulation is pretty good; it's only the big windows letting in sunlight (even with metal blinds in place) that causes it to heat massively.
It's all got me thinking that I have to do something to take the edge off temperatures on hot days. This might just be putting UV film on the windows to keep everything within comfortable operating temperature, which might be enough, and then keeping with glyclol/fermentation chambers. But if I want space to ferment 50L at a time, maybe multiples of 50L, then fermentation chambers will probably take up more space than I am willing to give up.
So, finally, the question! Does anyone have any idea how much of a good/bad/expensive idea it would be to install an air con system capable of heating in the winter and cooling in the summer, so that it would cover the entire small space of the brewery and allow me to have free standing fermenters and not worry about extra cooling? I am really keen to brew sustainably, so it's not about cost saving per se: I would still like to brew lagers and some ales in the winter so a little extra heat, and saisons and kveik beers in the summer, a little extra cooling, but I am conscious that it would involve heating or cooling an entire space 24/7 for the sake of a couple of fermenters. Of course, for about 6mo of the year I would hope that the temperature would remain mostly stable without either heating or cooling, so it's only the summer and winter months (I hope!). I would not want to go down this route, even if I could afford it, if it's worse for the environment than other methods.
A disadvantage of the air con idea is that it would be impossible to cold crash. I wouldn't want to invest in air con only to have to devote space/money to chillers or extra fridges.
If anyone has any experience of this approach, or has an idea of what the financial or economic impact would be, or has any other thoughts at all I'd be glad to hear from you!
Cheers
I'm finishing off my brewery build which is a garden office (galvanised steel shell with timber studwork, proboard and insulation, double glazed windows/doors all along one side). The interior space is quite small: roughly 6m long, 4m wide, 2m high.
I have a 100L 3-vessel system and I'm thinking about fermenters to match. I can only get 20L at a time into my fermentation chamber, so it's time to start seriously thinking about how to do temperature control. The unit gets quite hot: last week it got up to the high-thirties which is not good for the life of the compressors in my freezer and fridge out there. It also rules out ambient fermentation of anything except kveik beers and saisons in the summer. It gets cold in winter but always stays comfortably above freezing - the insulation is pretty good; it's only the big windows letting in sunlight (even with metal blinds in place) that causes it to heat massively.
It's all got me thinking that I have to do something to take the edge off temperatures on hot days. This might just be putting UV film on the windows to keep everything within comfortable operating temperature, which might be enough, and then keeping with glyclol/fermentation chambers. But if I want space to ferment 50L at a time, maybe multiples of 50L, then fermentation chambers will probably take up more space than I am willing to give up.
So, finally, the question! Does anyone have any idea how much of a good/bad/expensive idea it would be to install an air con system capable of heating in the winter and cooling in the summer, so that it would cover the entire small space of the brewery and allow me to have free standing fermenters and not worry about extra cooling? I am really keen to brew sustainably, so it's not about cost saving per se: I would still like to brew lagers and some ales in the winter so a little extra heat, and saisons and kveik beers in the summer, a little extra cooling, but I am conscious that it would involve heating or cooling an entire space 24/7 for the sake of a couple of fermenters. Of course, for about 6mo of the year I would hope that the temperature would remain mostly stable without either heating or cooling, so it's only the summer and winter months (I hope!). I would not want to go down this route, even if I could afford it, if it's worse for the environment than other methods.
A disadvantage of the air con idea is that it would be impossible to cold crash. I wouldn't want to invest in air con only to have to devote space/money to chillers or extra fridges.
If anyone has any experience of this approach, or has an idea of what the financial or economic impact would be, or has any other thoughts at all I'd be glad to hear from you!
Cheers