dont knock till you try it, beer is drinkable immediately and no green taste, i crash chill beer to 2deg then 1 mic filter, also takes away most chill haze.Why is filtering on a homebrew scale worthwhile, when there are so many positive reports of using gelatine finings and crash chilling? I have done neither because cloudy beer doesn't bother me, but might start CC'ing some of my paler beers for competition purposes.
dont knock till you try it
What are you talking about ?
We,re talking about filters... Because the OP asked about filtering.
But you could also look at cold crashing and finings to give you a similarly effective way of reducing bottle sediment.
You can get an idea here...Mate what is a pad filter?
Exactly ! If it's similarly effective, then CC & finings appear to be easier
i have tried gravity feeding at first but the filter clogged too quick . i think you need a bigger inlet and outlet pipe and a fair height between fermenter and filter housing to get a decent flow. pressure filtering is much easier for me but you need a spare keg.Fair call. Not that I was knocking it though I will get around to trying it soon, if just for the experience. But when I get judges sheets back saying "good clarity" on brews that have had no filtering, no finings and no crash chilling, I struggle for justification in taking any further steps.
Is it possible to gravity-feed through a filter unit, or do you need some pressure to help things along?
Did you buy craftbrewers complete housing/filter assembly or are you talking filter cartridges only?
I am feeling the pain everytime I try to filter with my clarence water filter setup.
i have tried gravity feeding at first but the filter clogged too quick . i think you need a bigger inlet and outlet pipe and a fair height between fermenter and filter housing to get a decent flow. pressure filtering is much easier for me but you need a spare keg.
i use 2 black liquid disconnects, siphon from fermenter into keg then attach filter to keg out on both kegs, this way you don't allow air into the mix as it fills the filtered keg from the bottom, just pop the relief valve on the keg to be filled, make sure the filter housing has a purge valve to expel air when the filter first
fills. i get better results by chilling beer first, i dont seem to get chill haze anymore, i know this doesn't affect taste but i love presentation, and no waiting,
i've got a lot of thirsty friends :icon_cheers:
I'm pretty sure milob40's experience is in the minority though... While a lot of people do prefer to filter from keg to keg, there are a lot of other people out there filtering directly from their primary fermenters too.
I'm just putting the fermenter on the kitchen bench and the filter housing on the floor next to the receiving keg.
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