Matplat
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 15/1/15
- Messages
- 1,233
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Morning all,
So I made a stir plate, and after some teething issues caused by **** glassware, seemed to have it running pretty well.
I used it for the first time this week; I made up a 1l starter in a 1l flask and used the smallest stir bar I have (10mm) and it pulled a nice vortex, starter fermented out leaving a nice cake, happy days.
Last night I then pitched that cake into 2l of starter in a 3l flask, I used a slightly bigger stir bar (which had previously proven stable in 2l of water) and off we go again, nice vortex occasionally reaching the stir bar.
I went to check it later, still happy, checked it again a bit later and the bar had dropped off. Couldnt get the bar to stay on... tried a smaller bar, same thing? I then tried a larger bar that has a ridge in the middle of it, and it stayed on, but didn't pull a vortex.
I'm confused as, can anyone shed any light? how would fermentation be affecting things? does the release of co2 cause that much more turbulence?
So I made a stir plate, and after some teething issues caused by **** glassware, seemed to have it running pretty well.
I used it for the first time this week; I made up a 1l starter in a 1l flask and used the smallest stir bar I have (10mm) and it pulled a nice vortex, starter fermented out leaving a nice cake, happy days.
Last night I then pitched that cake into 2l of starter in a 3l flask, I used a slightly bigger stir bar (which had previously proven stable in 2l of water) and off we go again, nice vortex occasionally reaching the stir bar.
I went to check it later, still happy, checked it again a bit later and the bar had dropped off. Couldnt get the bar to stay on... tried a smaller bar, same thing? I then tried a larger bar that has a ridge in the middle of it, and it stayed on, but didn't pull a vortex.
I'm confused as, can anyone shed any light? how would fermentation be affecting things? does the release of co2 cause that much more turbulence?