Bobby M @ brewhardware.com
Or you can use a HWD 2000w and live dangerously like I do...ymmv
...having already "popped" one by letting my eKettle run dry.
no hes saying that a 4500w element is rated at a max of 4500w at 240v not 220v... at 220v the output is less.. I am assuming the OP means 240v but many here mistakenly refer to is as 220v... like some cal 120v 110v... this is because the range for a 240v appliance is usually 220v-240 and a houshold oulet wired for 240v usually puts out betwwen 235-240v from what Ive seem..You make it sound that they will get the full 4200W from the 240VAC element when wired on 120V...I don't think that is a case.
I think you will only get 25% of the 4200W...(1125W) if I understand the equasion correctly.
another advantage of ULWD elements btw is they will run dry without popping for a while... some do this to clean them actually.I too like to live dangerously with my HWD 2000w element...not a BobbyM version, although I may move to one of them at some point. I'm on the training wheels version ($12 Camco version on amazon), having already "popped" one by letting my eKettle run dry.
Ok so what 120 element would get a 5 g batch to boil if on a 15-20 amp circuits? Any??
Good to know... I have seen people do this experiment over and over and the posted results vary a lot is seems... One reason could be the variance in a 2000w element from one to the next can be hundreds of watts and of course things like achieving a boil in a tall narrow kettle will be easier than a wider short one and such...I conducted a little experiment this afternoon. I put 6 gallons in an 11 gal b/c kettle and heated with a 2000w 120v element. I placed the kettle on a bath towel folded in half, and also wrapped another bath towel around the kettle for insulation.
Ambient temp 63f in my basement.
Time to boil from 152f with pot covered - 37 minutes.
After a 60 minute boil, loss to boil off was 0.65 gallons, or 11% by volume.
Facts rather than speculation.
Can you brew 5 gallon batches w/ 2000w 120v, YES
Is it the best way, NO
Based on the above, I believe the 2500w boil coil would work for 5 gallon batches in a 10 gallon kettle. I would suspect the numbers would be even more favorable using a smaller kettle, say 8 gallon. IME a smaller kettle is a bit more efficient when using low wattage.
No controller required, unless you can turn it up to 11 lol.
Cheers happy new year!
Wilser
Good to know... I have seen people do this experiment over and over....
Nice power for a 120V element, but at almost 21 amps, it wouldn't work with most home circuits.
Yea I realized that as well, so how is one supposed to power the 2500w boil coil? A 30A 110V circuit? That is not very common?
Or are most users just plugging into a 20a circuit and crossing their fingers lol
+1Do realize that you can't fire an element in a stagnant mash, ?
I only have regular kitchen gfci outlets to work with at the moment
Who said hwd? Post above reads ULWD. 2250w is not really enough anyhow. So worried about scorching, gonna build a kettle that barely boils.
Unfortunately my kettle is only 13.5"
Unfortunately my kettle is only 13.5"