megabyte
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- 18/4/10
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I'm not sure if anyone's tried this before so I thought I'd share and be social
Background: I think it would be awesome if your stir plate could display how your yeast population is growing. Sure you can tell if fermentation is active from the krausen and tiny bubbles swirling around in your flask, but some of us like to tinker (especially since my wife and I are in the business of building stir plates) and I'd love to be able to visualise the yeast population growth through the lag, active and cleanup stages and see if there's anything useful that can be done with the data that's collected. Maybe if the data is clean enough it could lead to a stir plate that goes "bing" like your microwave when your starter is done :lol:
Anyhow, today I've been working on a prototype that records the change in reflected light from my test yeast starter. It's too early to know if it's going to work, but when I pitched my yeast (about 1/5th of the safale pack pictured) the sensor picked up a drop in reflected light from about 727 down to 290, so it stands to reason that maybe if the yeast population doubles overnight the light reading will drop significantly further too. It's currently logging to a website and I hope I can post an excel spreadsheet when it's done (successful or not).
If this doesn't work out I might still try shining a laser through the mix or changing the IR sensor to a 600nm sensor since this is more suited to monitoring microorganisms. Comments and suggestions are welcome as always!
Background: I think it would be awesome if your stir plate could display how your yeast population is growing. Sure you can tell if fermentation is active from the krausen and tiny bubbles swirling around in your flask, but some of us like to tinker (especially since my wife and I are in the business of building stir plates) and I'd love to be able to visualise the yeast population growth through the lag, active and cleanup stages and see if there's anything useful that can be done with the data that's collected. Maybe if the data is clean enough it could lead to a stir plate that goes "bing" like your microwave when your starter is done :lol:
Anyhow, today I've been working on a prototype that records the change in reflected light from my test yeast starter. It's too early to know if it's going to work, but when I pitched my yeast (about 1/5th of the safale pack pictured) the sensor picked up a drop in reflected light from about 727 down to 290, so it stands to reason that maybe if the yeast population doubles overnight the light reading will drop significantly further too. It's currently logging to a website and I hope I can post an excel spreadsheet when it's done (successful or not).
If this doesn't work out I might still try shining a laser through the mix or changing the IR sensor to a 600nm sensor since this is more suited to monitoring microorganisms. Comments and suggestions are welcome as always!