• If you have bought, sold or gained information from our Classifieds, please donate to HomeBrewTalk and give back.

    You can become a Supporting Member which comes with a decal or just click here to donate.

Wisconsin 5g Electric Brewery for Sale SE Wisconsin (2P-Twent-E) - $2,000

Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum

Help Support Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum:

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

Boerderij_Kabouter

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 21, 2007
Messages
7,763
Reaction score
178
Location
Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
I am relisting with a lowered price based on some recommendations from members. Cheers!

CIMG7193.jpg


I have decided to sell my turnkey homebrewery. Included in this sale is everything you need to brew beer at home. The sale includes the following and I would like to sell it as a package only.

TOTAL - $2,000

brewery $1,300.00
mill $100.00
testing supplies $80.00
fermenters $60.00
grain/storage $100.00
kegs $120.00
keg washer $75.00
stir plates $45.00
flasks $65.00
byo collection $10.00
oxy kit $45.00

The brewery is my own design and called the 2P-Twent-E ad has been detailed here: https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=160970

It is an all electric system that runs on 110VAC at 20 amps. So you can brew in any kitchen or garage you want to with no exhaust needed for fumes! It is a great little system and while it will brew 4g optimally, I have been brewing 5.25g batches with it for the last several years, it just adds about 30 minutes to the brewday. The construction is all stainless with a copper wort chiller/HERMS coil and stainless cam lock connections. This thing is really a dream to brew on. Extra bonus, it acts as a great sous vide water oven for the chefs out there. The temperature is controlled via PID in the control box. I usually use the PID function to maintain mash temperatures, then pin it to 100% in the controllers manual mode during boil. Pumps are switch controlled.

The extras include a Monster Mill MM2. It is a great little mill and chows through the grain. I have 6 airtight five gallon buckets for grain storage and you can have what's left in them.

Two stir plates are included with stirbars for starting your yeast cultures. I also have 2 1L Erlenmeyer flasks and a 5L Erlenmeyer.

Test kit includes a refractometer, and a full set of testing hydrometers from Williams brewing. They are beautiful and give very precise/accurate readings. Also comes with a glass hydrometer jar, pH test strips, a stainless turkey baster, and is packaged in an aluminum sided foam filled case. http://www.williamsbrewing.com/HYDROMETERS-REFRACTOMETERS-C74.aspx

Williams Brewing oxygen wand and one full O2 tank. http://www.williamsbrewing.com/WILLIAMS-5-MICRON-OXYGEN-AERATION-SYSTEM-P3668.aspx

Keg washer and two sanke kegs to get you started toward kegging. I HIGHLY recommend sanke kegs over cornies. The washer is great for cleaning fermenters and kegs. I'll also toss in some sani-clean, starsan, and what's left of my pbw. http://www.northernbrewer.com/shop/brewery-essentials-carboy-washer-assembly

I'll include two near new fermenter buckets, and two 6g carboys, along with some airlocks and bungs.

Massive collection of BYO and Zymergy magazines for you to look through.

All told, this is a great value for someone who wants to get serious about their brewing. The only thing you really need past this is a sanke tap setup, and a temp controlled fridge. This system will allow you to produce very high quality beer with better control over the process than many systems. It is flexible and easy to use. The brewery itself cost about $2,700 to build in parts alone, and all the other components are the top end available for home brewers.
 
may be interested. iv never done electric brewing though. only propane. can you please explain how the difference is? dont have
 
Back
Top