Ckilner
Well-Known Member
I have also considered avoiding the problem by holding the hops in muslin bags but I'm not sure they would impart as much flavour if trapped in a bag.
I've thought about a plate chiller but I've read various opinions about sanitising them and how you know they are clean inside. How do you clean them?durgarth said:004.JPG
I have had my 50 litre for 18 months or so and have tried using an immersion chiller and whirlpooling, then gave it away. It was just too difficult. So I shelled out the extra and moved to a plate chiller and have not looked back. I now I whirlpool, leaving it settle for 15 minutes (adding last minute hop additions during that time) then chill straight into the fermenting vessel. Adding a clarifying agent also helps. I know the 30 plate chiller is fairly expensive and was was around $150, but it is money well spent .
With my chiller, as soon as I've finished with it I flush & back flush it a couple of times, then empty it out. Prior to next use, I fill it with a solution of hot water & NapiSan and let it sit for half an hour, then immediately before use, rinse it out and flush it with StarSan. Might be a little OTT but haven't had a problem with it yet and have never had an infection.Ckilner said:I've thought about a plate chiller but I've read various opinions about sanitising them and how you know they are clean inside. How do you clean them?
(I add Protofloc 15 mins before the end of the boil)
Even if you could somehow get it to plug in the 50l regularly draws 14 amps especially during the boil. It will trip the circuit.pnorkle said:I think you'll find that the 15A plug won't fit into a 10A outlet - the earth pin is larger than the 10A.
This is the important bit - as durgarth says, not a good a good idea to do it - if the heat generated caused a fire (say, if the electrical wiring inside the walls ignited) and the house burnt down, you'd probably find that insurance company wouldn't pay out if they found out the cause. Not worth the risk.its not so much the circuit breaker its the heat generated
I tried to cheat a bit with my new 50lt. I purchased a 15A extension cord with 15A plugs on both ends. I cut the male side off & wired up a 10A plug so I could just plug it into a normal household 10A powerpoint. The Braumeister ran fine for my water tests but a couple of problems with doing it.stakka82 said:Really? The plug just looked normal to me, but I've never had that close a look at it to be honest.
And if it trips the circuit what happens? Other stuff on the circuit just turns off and I have to go to the board and turn the circuit back on yeah?
No it wont trip the circuit unless it's running on the same circuit as another appliance & they decide to switch it on. A 10A circuit breaker will trip out @16A, the Braumeister will run without tripping the circuit.durgarth said:Yeah
Even if you could somehow get it to plug in the 50l regularly draws 14 amps especially during the boil. It will trip the circuit.
Whilst the power circuit is normally protected with a 15amp fuse or circuit breaker and the wiring is rated at 15 amp the wall outlets are only rated at 10 ampsCrusty said:I tried to cheat a bit with my new 50lt. I purchased a 15A extension cord with 15A plugs on both ends. I cut the male side off & wired up a 10A plug so I could just plug it into a normal household 10A powerpoint. The Braumeister ran fine for my water tests but a couple of problems with doing it.
1. The Braumeister was running on the same circuit as quite a few of the powerpoints in the house so if the wife switched on the kettle for a cuppa, the circuit would trip.
2. The powerpoint got quite hot from the extended power draw & continually doing that would no doubt place extra strain on the existing wiring & possibly lead to melted wires or a burnt looking plug & or powerpoint.
I ended up just getting a sparky to come over & wire up it's own 15A powerpoint with it's own circuit breaker. I paid $20.00 for the powerpoint & $150.00 for the electrician. I really wouldn't muck around with trying to run the thing on a standard 10A outlet, too hot & too risky.
No it wont trip the circuit unless it's running on the same circuit as another appliance & they decide to switch it on. A 10A circuit breaker will trip out @16A, the Braumeister will run without tripping the circuit.
Yep.Coalminer said:Whilst the power circuit is normally protected with a 15amp fuse or circuit breaker and the wiring is rated at 15 amp the wall outlets are only rated at 10 amps
There was a time when they could handle 15 amps but even so called good brands such as HPM are now made in China and I would think that they are not over designed like in the past
Enter your email address to join: