Following three months of deliberation I've finally taken the plunge and gotten myself set up with a Brewtools B40pro all-in-one system. It certainly feels like a fantastic setup but there's one question I keep coming back to as I mentally prepare for my first brew day: how do you accurately control the rate of sparging?
I've hooked up a 20 litre Cygnet water heater and am satisfied that despite my shoddy (temporary!) plumbing there's going to be more than enough flow rate available since I can empty the tank in under two minutes. I can't see how any grain bed will drain that quickly, but when I reduce the pump speed to what I imagine I'll need suddenly the sparge hat stops being a sprinkler and instead dribbles water down the centre pipe:
It would explain the existence of things like this recirculation fitting which I imagine you'd use instead of the sparge hat to manually splash water over your grain bed by hand, in which case you might as well use a ball valve and gravity to delivery your sparge water from an elevated tank, cutting out the B40pro altogether.
I should probably just stop sweating the small stuff and get on with that first brew day, but being offshore means a 10 day wait and quite a bit of postage so I want to eliminate as many pitfalls as I can before I ruin my first batch.
I've hooked up a 20 litre Cygnet water heater and am satisfied that despite my shoddy (temporary!) plumbing there's going to be more than enough flow rate available since I can empty the tank in under two minutes. I can't see how any grain bed will drain that quickly, but when I reduce the pump speed to what I imagine I'll need suddenly the sparge hat stops being a sprinkler and instead dribbles water down the centre pipe:
- Probably too much
- Maybe just right
- Sprinkle no more
Oh and the Sparging is a bit hit and miss with the Brewtools.
I’ve bought a rotating sparge arm which I’m going to test out next brew day and I believe that Brewtools has something in the works to improve sparging too.
It would explain the existence of things like this recirculation fitting which I imagine you'd use instead of the sparge hat to manually splash water over your grain bed by hand, in which case you might as well use a ball valve and gravity to delivery your sparge water from an elevated tank, cutting out the B40pro altogether.
I should probably just stop sweating the small stuff and get on with that first brew day, but being offshore means a 10 day wait and quite a bit of postage so I want to eliminate as many pitfalls as I can before I ruin my first batch.