DanDCBorder
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2022
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Hi, I'm hopefully going to try some kitchentop BIAB small batch 1 gallon brewing to see if it whets my appetite. I don't have much room in the house so fermenting will have to take place in the garage.
In the garage I have an old fridge freezer where the top part is a fridge and will take a fermentation vessel, but the fridge part cannot be isolated from the freezer. I know chest freezers or under counter fridges are better but I'm trying to use what I've got in the garage!
I also have enough 50mm celotex to build some sort of insulation unit for the fermentation vessel.
I took some min/max temperature readings from the switched off fridge compartment over the past few 'cold' days. The minimum was 6.9 degrees and the maximum was 17.2 degrees. Based on this I have a couple of questions!
1. If I used the fridge freezer and based on those temps, I assume I would be predominantly heating up rather than cooling down. If I simply relied on heating via some sort of bulb/inkbird type affair, would it's natural cooling be enough when switched off i.e. would I actually need the fridge (freezer) switched on to bring the temp down quicker?
2. Am I better building something separate to the fridge/freezer with the Celotex? Or make the fridge more insulative with the Celotex?
That's it for now!
Thanks
Dan
In the garage I have an old fridge freezer where the top part is a fridge and will take a fermentation vessel, but the fridge part cannot be isolated from the freezer. I know chest freezers or under counter fridges are better but I'm trying to use what I've got in the garage!
I also have enough 50mm celotex to build some sort of insulation unit for the fermentation vessel.
I took some min/max temperature readings from the switched off fridge compartment over the past few 'cold' days. The minimum was 6.9 degrees and the maximum was 17.2 degrees. Based on this I have a couple of questions!
1. If I used the fridge freezer and based on those temps, I assume I would be predominantly heating up rather than cooling down. If I simply relied on heating via some sort of bulb/inkbird type affair, would it's natural cooling be enough when switched off i.e. would I actually need the fridge (freezer) switched on to bring the temp down quicker?
2. Am I better building something separate to the fridge/freezer with the Celotex? Or make the fridge more insulative with the Celotex?
That's it for now!
Thanks
Dan