7brew
Member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2014
- Messages
- 19
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I've got a thermowell probe and fermostat I use to control fermentation temp. I had always read that if I keep the probe outside the carboy, that the actual temp of the wort will be slightly higher because yeast activity causes heat.
So I have been sticking it in the center of the carboy for my last few brews, immersing it into the center of the wort.
When I checked the temp today, it was a perfect 68 as it should be. Then I sloshed the wort around to stir up the yeast, and the temp dropped to about 63. I'm assuming that the outside of the liquid was cooler than the inside, which caused the temp drop.
I can also imagine that as the heater warms up the fermentation chamber, the temp swings in the other way as well, warming the outside of the beer to a possible 72+ in order to affect the thermowell sitting in the center of the liquid.
These kind of temp swings are probably not good for yeast. Should I just go back to having the probe outside the beer, keeping the chamber a more stable temp, and just keep it a bit cooler than 68 to account for yeast heat?
So I have been sticking it in the center of the carboy for my last few brews, immersing it into the center of the wort.
When I checked the temp today, it was a perfect 68 as it should be. Then I sloshed the wort around to stir up the yeast, and the temp dropped to about 63. I'm assuming that the outside of the liquid was cooler than the inside, which caused the temp drop.
I can also imagine that as the heater warms up the fermentation chamber, the temp swings in the other way as well, warming the outside of the beer to a possible 72+ in order to affect the thermowell sitting in the center of the liquid.
These kind of temp swings are probably not good for yeast. Should I just go back to having the probe outside the beer, keeping the chamber a more stable temp, and just keep it a bit cooler than 68 to account for yeast heat?