Sorry for the delay in responding...just falling back onto the brewing wagon after a hiatus :)
Are you asking for the derivation of the general equation form or the one will all the constants?
The general form was whipped up in my head based on what I thought the curve should look like...
I don't think the pH of wort is low enough to prevent botulism infection at room temperature storage (below pH 4.6 - USDA).
I believe canned wort must be canned in a pressure cooker in order to be shelf stable.
I do this, and not that this is a scientific representation but "it hasn't been a problem" (so far).
To keep things sanitary I attach about 12" of hose and then a ball lock on the end - all of which gets sanitized on brewing day. Also, I disassemble and clean the spigot, etc. and then...
You might take a whack at toasting pale malt to the desired shade.
Here's link from the interwebs that includes a bit about 200L chocolate malt in a pan on the stovetop.
http://barleypopmaker.info/2009/12/08/home-roasting-your-malts/
A rule of thumb would be to divide fresh hop weight by 4.5 to approximate "dry" weight equivalent.
Fresh hops are about 80% moisture content (m.c.) and dry hops are between 8-10% m.c.
Say you have 100 grams of wet hops, that would be 80 grams water and 20 grams dry matter.
If you assume...
It won't work to fill the head space with a high pressure because that pressure would be too high.
If you're trying to deliver ~2.4volumes CO2 and the headspace in a 5 gallon keg is 0.125 gallon and the residual volumes from fermentation is about 0.9 volumes then you'll need
10psi/volumes...
Can't you turn the relief valve 90 degrees to lock in in the up position?
What I usually do is start loosening the relief valve (turning counter clockwise) after I connect the jumper cable until it barely starts to hiss then I leave it there assuming is 1-2 psi lower than the tank pressure -...
I'd tend to agree with that. Anything over 1gpm in the outer hose is plenty turbulent.
I also agree with the idea of either running the wort up from the bottom of the CFC to the top or putting a valve on the downstream end of the CFC to make sure the tube is completely filled.
I don't...
One "problem" with the CFCs is that both the water and the wort flow need to be flowing fast enough to be turbulent (mixing). If you throttle back the wort (say below 0.5gpm for a 1/2" OD pipe or 0.375gpm for a 3/8" OD pipe) the flow switches from turbulent to laminar(non-mixing). The result...
Why not just put the keg on a lazy-susan. Then it would just take a small motor to keep the whole thing spinning since the only energy input needed is to overcome the friction of the ball bearings.
I'd try it with a remote control car motor - those have some pretty good torque.
I think the amount of salt needed to make shrimp taste good basically makes it sea water. Who doesn't like a nice tall glass of carbonated ocean?
"Water, water everywhere, so let's all take a drink" - Homer Simpson