Increase your crush and you will get better efficiency.
I should have ran the grain thru my mill twice. The low setting on my drill was trying to burn out about half way thru my crush so things got a lil rushed on the second half of the grain bill.
The second was crushed by AHS.
I used 1/2". Mine looks pretty identical to the OPs. I tried to post a picture in my previous comment, but I accidentally posted the picture I had of his!...
I have a metal mesh manifold that was working like crap until a friend suggested rice hulls. After a bit of reworking the manifold (mesh manipulation) and the rice hulls, I was able to increase my eff. from 67% up to 74. I would love to take the time and have a nicely designed CPVC formed in the bottom of mine. The pics here look great. Thanks for the inspiration!
I thought they looked a bit too similar
I just bought the 52 gallon version...
Is this right? 52 gallons? How big is that? The size of a full size fridge?
I have a similar manifold and I know that CPVC is safe for use with drinking water. My concern is that the smooth inside of the CPVC is safe but when you cut the slits thru it exposes the porous inner part if the CPVC to the wort. Anyone know if this is of any concern or am I just paranoid?
I have a similar manifold and I know that CPVC is safe for use with drinking water. My concern is that the smooth inside of the CPVC is safe but when you cut the slits thru it exposes the porous inner part if the CPVC to the wort. Anyone know if this is of any concern or am I just paranoid?
I've been using a cpvc manifold for over a year. Because I batch sparge, runoff speed is not important after vorlaufing. Therefore, I put lots of slots and alternating drilled holes in mine. I want it to drain fast. Also, if you batch sparge, you don't really have to worry about channeling like you do with continuous fly sparging. The first time your mash paddle separates one of the fittings in your manifold, you will want to glue it together -ask me how I know. My manifold is easily removable from the mash tun and very easy to clean.
Here is my best tip - several weeks ago I was brewing a big RIS and I had a very fine crush. I had never needed rice hulls before and while researching that I came across a great suggestion. I would give credit to whomever gave me this idea but I don't remember - I'm sure I read it on HBT. Here it is: before mashing, put the manifold inside a five gallon paint strainer bag. I just tie the bag around the piece that connects the manifold to the drain/ball valve. The fine mesh effectively lauters the wort before it even enters the manifold. It almost eliminates the need to vorlauf because almost nothing but clear wort gets in the manifold in the first place.
I tried the strainer trick but its another thing to clean. I have a cpvc manifold and didn't glue it. Guess I've had better luck. But mine does fit tight in the cooler.
Have no issues vorloufing about 1 gallon and letting her rip. I guess everyone has their own experiences during brew day.
I almost edited my post to mention the extra cleaning but was too lazy. I dump my mash tun while bringing the wort to boil. After rinsing the tun, I fill it with hot water and Oxy and use it to soak hoses and other equipment so I just throw the bag in there.
I didn't have any problem with my manifold for quite a few brews, but eventually the connections loosened up and after having it come apart once I never wanted to have to deal with that mess again.
I actually tried the bag to prevent the fine crush from clogging the manifold, not because of a problem with vorlaufing. The fact that the runoff was so clear was an additional benefit. It did such a good job of separating the grain and husks from the wort that I decided to keep doing it.
Any reason I shouldn't make one long cut down the center of all the pipe? Seems like I could just pass it through the table saw and save a bunch of time. Thoughts?
Any reason I shouldn't make one long cut down the center of all the pipe? Seems like I could just pass it through the table saw and save a bunch of time. Thoughts?
Weakens the plastic cylinder? Maybe long cut, stop, long cut, stop, repeat??
Any reason I shouldn't make one long cut down the center of all the pipe? Seems like I could just pass it through the table saw and save a bunch of time. Thoughts?
thread I started a while back someone mentioned that rows of slots weakened the structure
wish I had a saw that I could test this out. I kept some of the extra pipe I used for my manifold
Thank you! I was looking for a thread on that. Searching here is not easy. Too many returns.
Speaking of which, anyone found an easy way to do continuous sparging, with manually monitoring the mash temps?
Yeah i thought about that. I'm going to give it a shot this weekend and see how it builds out. I could even use a grinder and decrease width of cut and shorten the lengths of the cut. ill let everyone know if it goes well. Thanks for the comments.Weakens the plastic cylinder? Maybe long cut, stop, long cut, stop, repeat??
you can check at the bottom of these pages, will list "similar" threads...