I'm joining the club, just ordered a 120V 15A 6 gallon system today.
The waiting begins.
Congrats. I predict you're really gonna enjoy it.
Let us know how the maiden voyage goes.
I'm joining the club, just ordered a 120V 15A 6 gallon system today.
The waiting begins.
Yeah, my efficiencies have ranged from about 60 all the way up to 88%. I definitely need to dial in my process.
I've ordered a couple more 5" segments of the Loc-Line, so I should be able to make my own single ended circle for whirlpooling. Hope the idea works.
I was researching several electric brewing systems, was mainly curious about The Grainfather & Braumeister and stumbled upon this thread. This looks like a nice system and am really curious about it - I like that it seems pretty easy to switch out parts if something brakes whereas other systems have proprietary parts.
Yes, NoDo the mash temps hold well? Are there any big temp swings with this?
very effective.Also, I've never used a plate chiller - is it effective in cooling wort
yes, easy to hook up. The connections are QDs which are quite easy to use.and easy to hook up with this?
Like you hinted at: simplicity, ease of use, less equipment to take care of. I am very happy that I switched to single vessel eBIAB.Really interested in this, I decided after my last batch that I'm done with 2 pots and an igloo cooler and jumping through hoops to hit my strike temp, undershooting my mash temp, leaky mash tun, etc.
I'd love to know why ya'll ended up choosing this over other systems.
I was researching several electric brewing systems, was mainly curious about The Grainfather & Braumeister and stumbled upon this thread. This looks like a nice system and am really curious about it - I like that it seems pretty easy to switch out parts if something brakes whereas other systems have proprietary parts.
Do the mash temps hold well? Are there any big temp swings with this?
Also, I've never used a plate chiller - is it effective in cooling wort and easy to hook up with this?
Really interested in this, I decided after my last batch that I'm done with 2 pots and an igloo cooler and jumping through hoops to hit my strike temp, undershooting my mash temp, leaky mash tun, etc.
I'd love to know why ya'll ended up choosing this over other systems.
I just bought the mini cause I usually do 3 gallon batches. Does anyone ever pull the grain out and sparge up to 5 gallons pre-boil? Just curious if I'd be able to do an occasional larger batch that way.
I tried a 5 gallon IPA batch on the mini yesterday, it works ok. I steeped about 8.5 lbs of grain, main problem is when you pull that much grain out there is hardly any wort left. I set the basket and bag over the kettle and slowly poured hot water thru till it was just over 5 gallons. Gravity wasn't too bad it came to about 1050 pre-boil, I added corn sugar and got it to 1055. Boil was very weak with that much liquid so after 60 min I was at 1060 gravity and probably 4.75 gallons of wort into fermenter
I just placed an order for the Unibrau this morning, non-mini size. I originally was going to purchase one in December but with the new upgrades I decided to hold off, as to me the upgrades seemed worth it. Definitely excited to see it and start brewing with it.
We are now using a new pump that has a steel body and is 120V. Pictures should be up soon.Hey,
Thinking about getting the mini for an indoor lab/pilot system doing approx 2.5 gallon brews. After reading through this thread it seems like a good fit..short of a pump upgrade this should fit the bill. Anything I'm missing? Seems like there should be plenty of room for 2.5-3 gallon batches...definitely don't want to push it to its max based on some of the mash overflow comments.