Square boiler with conical bottom tap

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matth

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As the title suggests I'm having a boiler built so I'm thinking is a square boiler a problem? Is it just that cleaning is a bit of a chore or is ther something else to do with boiling dynamics or circulation that make circular more popular?

I want a mesh lining inside for a hop strainer and so I can just pull it out and empty it, if I have a slightly conical bottom draining valve (sounds a bit wrong) will the hops act as a filter for the cold break etc? Tbh I'm not actually that bothered about that but I'd be interested to know.

I want it to be fairly tall so that I can efficiently do smaller batches.

Cheers
 
quote
boiling dynamics or circulation


Ya got me there, but there must be a reason most kettles dont have corners !

Cleaning into the right angles will be problematic also, but hey its a boiler, nasties get burned....
 
Sorry about boiling dynamics etc, but there's always someone who comes in with something ultra scientific. Just want a good boiler with a good boiling roll - my 15 ltr plastic bucket works a treat but is too small.
 
get yourself a standard stainless steel pot the biggest you can afford, add a couple of elements. Voila !

You can brew anything my son.....
 
I'm having one made for free - by my father in-law (who i'm living with while i look for a new house - so i'm consious of not taking up too much space), that said he knows he'll get free beer when done! I think around 100 ltr to cope with around 80 ltr brew length max but thin enough to do a 23 ltr batch should i wish. Also big enough not to want a bigger one in the not too distant future. Quite like the idea of having a 0.5 bbl.

Once i have found a house with a shed or similar then i'll get him to produce the rest HLT, MT, etc to match.

What kind of element do you recommend - i use a single tesco element at the mo in my 15 litre bucket - which has been great but should i be looking at an immersion heater type thing - or some form of bendy element that can be shaped (i have no idea what these are - its something he had used on a heating vessel for another company that makes perfumes and he thought were good) or just more kettle elements - 2?

I quite like the idea of being able to choose the amount of power so i suppose kettle element sare a good choice - but also more cleaning?

now i'm just confusing myself so ill shut up
 
great, tthanks.

Now i'm sorry if this sounds daft, but the tesco ones seem to be rated at 2.2kw - and the ones linked at 2kw, wouldn't the tesco ones be more powerful or is there some sort of efficiency or reliability thing going on. sorry electrics is a bit of a weak point for me.
 
I've used both types, and can't say I have noticed any difference.
The ones with a nut are slightly easier to get a good seal on, dependant on the thickness of your vessel, but a simple silicon seal does the job on the Tesco ones (or the Asda ones in my case, as I haven't seen a cheap kettle in T's for over a year now).
 
Great thanks, i have used the tesco one in my present boiler for nearly 2 years and that has a home made silicon seal on that made from a baking tray and never had any problems, but with 2 running would the extra .2kw make any difference, trip a switch, blow my inlaws garage up?
It is properly wired with its own fuse box etc - his brother is an electrician.
should i put each element in to its own plug socket - ie not make a control box with a switch to turn each element off that then plugs into one socket?

Don't worry i will run this past an electician, just dont want to go to him with a stupid plan that ill never hear the end of.
 
If you want to run 2 elements then it will need a proper mains loop not a spur to it, something like a 30A feed (you need 20A+ for the 2 elements + what ever else is on)
You will need to feed from 2 sockets thats a taken, but the feed needs checked. My shed is on a 15A spur so no brewing in it. (I use the kitchen about 6' from the mains fuse box)
 
cheers, current garage (in-laws) i think has a mains loop of its own, and obviously i'll get one put in the shed or garage wherever i end up getting a new house - thats not a problem. i'll keep all that separate then i know what is running (other than boiler just fridges and lights)
one last daft question; once upto heat would a 70 to 80 ltr boil carry on a rolling boil with just one 2kw (or2.2) element?

Cheers
 
matth, Yes once you reach the boil temperature switch off one element, and you'll keep a 'rolling' boil. Works for me every time with up-to 90L.
 
Square or square with rounded corners, is the pattern followed by some of the old enameled burcos, and with a skilled metal worker on the job, funneling a bottom to a circular conical shape would be easier with a rounded corner square, than dealing with sharp 90 degree corners..
 
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