• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

$15 immersion chiller: But will it help?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

IndigoBlue

Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2014
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Hi all,

I brew extract, full 5 gallon boils (on my 3rd batch now and officially hooked) and live in Phoenix, AZ. That will be relevant in a moment.

I found a $15 immersion chiller (20' x 3/8" copper) on Craigslist but I'm concerned that it won't really help that much over my current set up (drop the 7gallon aluminum kettle into an ice bath in a large beverage tub) Being that I live in AZ and it's typically pretty warm here the "cold" water from my faucet isn't always that cold. The chiller is more for convenience as I've got a decent, albeit a hassle, system going and can get the wort down to 75 degrees in under 45 minutes-1 hour.

Using the tap water only, no ice bath will this chiller really do the job? Or do I need a whole 'nother bucket with ice water in that to run through the chiller?

Thanks!
 
buy it, and do both :) if you get a pump and run ice cold water from a bucket through the immersion chiller then you should be solid! plus its $15 worth a shot!
 
I do still have to buy new clamps and hoses but I had the same thought...it's 15 bucks..
 
It could be useful to pickup a submersible pump and pump cold ice water through the chiller. I'd say you probably want a larger diameter copper line for your chiller. Length helps but it is important to keep in mind the relationship between flow and pressure. 1/2"x50' would be better. It will still only get you down to your chilling water temperature.

How are you controlling fermentation temps? You could cool to ~80ºF and then let the fermentation control finish it out. I just moved to Tucson and that is my summer plan. I have a kick ass plate chiller that can make the wort the same as the water temp as fast as I can push the wort. But if the groundwater is 80 degrees….. I'm planning to let it cool to final pitching temp in the fermenter and then pitch.
 
I'm pumping ice water through a 25' 3/8" copper chiller and I go 212 to 62 in about 30 min. It works, but you have to keep the chiller moving through the wort. Wear a glove for the first 10 min.
 
It is taxing on the chamber, but unless you are hardcore and brew every weekend then it shouldn't be an issue. I think that pitchign 12 hours, or less, later is not a big deal as long as you have good post-boil sanitation practices.
 
Perfect that answered my question of how long do you have before you really need to pitch.
 
Back
Top