Having just decided on buying a 2nd hand fridge and a fridgemate for cooling my fermentation down, a new suggestion has been offered which involves running a standard fridge on its warmest setting (ie no fridgemate, thus allowing use of the freezer compartment of a fridge freezer combo ) and immersing an aquarium heater in the fermenter. A couple of questions about this set-up
- how and where do you put the heater through the lid of the fermenter?/ drill a cut-out hole and backfill with blu-tac?
- do aquarium heaters run cool enough for ideal fermentation (aiming for 17-19C)
- does this method create warm pockets within the wort...ie a kind of thermocline below the heater unit? do you need to stir the wort regularly to prevent this ?
look forward to your advice..info on here so far has been brilliant!!!
I do exactly this and have done for years - you will use a bit more electricity than just running the fridge, but not nearly as much as people will try to tell you. The key - and it really really is key - is to have your fermenter insulated to the right degree. Too little insulation and the heat exchange is high - it works' but the fridge runs a lot more than it needs to. Too much insulation and the fridge can't take out enough heat when the fermentation is running at its peak and your beer will get too hot.
Luckily - the perfect amount of insulation seems to be one layer of good old camping mat around the middle of the fermenter. None on the bottom & none on the top.
I dont "seal' my fermenters - so the heater just goes in over the edge and the lidscrewed down loosely with the cord in a gap - or mostly I use gladwrap and a big rubber band.
Do they control in the right temperature range?? Sort of. Mine control from 18-30C and thats fine for most ales in my book. I know that its possible to buy heaters that control down to 12ish or even less - but they were expensive, more expensive than my solution which is to run them via a fridgemate when I want lower temperatures. Heater on flat out - temperature controlled by the fridgemate in Heating Mode.
I personally use this solution rather than controlling the whole fridge - because it evens out highs and lows in Melbourne's variable whether, it allows me to use the freezer section of the fridge as a freezer still, I can do a lager and an ale in the same fridge at the same time and I use the fridge as an extra keggerator - with an ale fermenting in there and a lager pouring out.
As you can see in the picture ... an ale brewing on the bottom, a lager brewing on the top (controlled) and a bunch of case swap beers all chilling. Hops etc frozen in the top section (note - I didn't have insulation on the fermenters in this instance, and the fridge worked like a bastard, never since)
Not the solution for everybody - but it works and works well, with certain advantages.
Thirsty