True. I just hate Radioshack and can't think of anything else I would ever use it on.
Haha, yea I was thinking the same thing!
True. I just hate Radioshack and can't think of anything else I would ever use it on.
The freezer I am putting it in will be in a garage year-round. The keg fridge will be in the basement. I plan on getting something for both setups. Do you have any pics of your setup?
It sounds like you are already planning on it, but I recently did the STC-1000 build and I highly recommend you wire it with a power outlet on the front so that you can just plug into that. That way, if you decide to change heating or cooling methods down the line, you just simply unplug instead of rewiring the hardwire.
As for the fermentation heater, I am getting the feeling that using a ceramic heater is way overkill, especially if you have a small fermentation chamber. I have a small space, and I think of it this way:
If I have the temp probe insulated against the carboy/bucket, I'm measuring the temp of the wort (or close to it). The 5 gallon liquid mass takes a long longer to heat up than air. So, using the ceramic heater example...Let's say you want your wort at 65. Maybe the heater kicks on at 63. Let's say it's going to take (a hypothetical) 30 minutes for that wort to rise to 65. That heater will be on the whole time. It's going to heat the air up inside that space like crazy before it kicks of due to the small space and the difference in heating time. It seems to me the air would be damn hot in there, which could probably even approach damaging temps.
Obviously, if you are closer to your temp range to begin with, it probably won't be a problem. But I think, from what I gathered, is you want a slow, steady heating source (like a pad or light bulb) so that the differential isn't too crazy.
Is the ferm chamber going in a cold garage for the winter? I'm thinking the ceramic heater is way overkill if not. I didn't build a can, I just found an old short lamp housing, stuck a 15 watt cfl in there and called it a day.
I would be careful with the CFL's. Fluorescent bulbs generate UV light (far more than an incandescent does) and usually plenty less heat. Do you notice any skunking?
Additionally. I am one of those that uses the incandescent in a can in a chest freezer to great effect. I have my ferm chamber in the garage, and after a few batches have no growth in there at all. I did put one of the eva-dry plug in units in though because here in the DC area we have really humid summers.
Did you really get much heat from the CFL? I seem to remember the fluorescent bulbs themselves do not create much heat (part of their energy conserving properties) and that if anything the transformer would be the only thing to make any heat.