Have
Have you ever explored better chillers? I have a homemade thing for my propane burner pot. It's too big for the G4 that I have (35L or whatever the smaller one is), but it's WAAAAy more efficient even though it's a bit ugly. Think I'm going to sell off all my old gear and maybe that'll...
Yeah I was thinking of that too, at a min would have to run boiling wort through it a while to ensure no bacteria lives, but I got concerned my sketchy plumbing skills could let the snow leak in or wort out... I'm using the stock chiller, and it isn't that good... maybe i'll upgrade to a better...
I'm pretty good at planning ahead. Another poster put up a flow control output that I'm pretty sure I'll be using.. I'll keep a few water jugs available all the time. It beats a run over to the grocery store to get brewing..
I won't be getting that one, it was another posted interested in it. I want a permanent one installed in the hous.. my water is terrible in the spring.
Interesting.. it looks like it's just an easier to store RO system, but it's pretty expensive. I can understand a use case for that for sure. In my case I think I'll plumb it into my home and use it for drinking/cooking/ice machine water as well.
Could you elaborate on this a little more? Have you come up with a way to fill a different container via float valve? This sounds optimal.
*EDIT: Just saw your other post. Thanks for that tip, I love the idea. I could just have it filling my brewzilla the night before!
Ah - thank you, i didn't know there was a standard filter size! That's excellent information - I've been worried about installing a system then not being able to find filters down the road. Thank you!
Hi all. I don't see any recent equipment recommendations regarding specific RO systems. I'm in Canada, so I can order most of the same models that are available in the USA as well. The most recent I see is the iSpring RCC7, although that was from 2020.
I would be using it for drinking water...
I will definitly do that, I believe my brewzilla g4 is programmable for it. The only downside is grain is had to get here, I have a 2.5 hr drive or shipping, which is expensive in Canada. But I've on the prairies and there's some malters around that I can buy in nulk 50kg or so bags... so I...