cnash
Well-Known Member
Nice! You built that all yourself (coils and all)?
PEX looks good there.
PEX looks good there.
OK. Thought about making a new thread, but will try posting in here first. I am about at my wit's end with the "Swirl Boss" attachment. I don't think i've ever had a full brew session without having to do some kind of clearing it. Seems to be causing me more trouble with latest batches though.
Curious if others have trouble, or if they use something else? Also, anyone know why it's cut with the "E" type shape? Wondering if i can just bend out those flaps to make the "out" holes bigger.
Overall, still very much love my BB, but i'm about to ditch this piece for something else (unless i'm doing it wrong)
Any help or advice appreciated.
anyone else having a problem with the pump getting primed? In most cases i have to loosen up the tri clamp. Rotate the pump so it's at like a 45 degree angle.
Sorry, i though about it afterward. forgot to mention i have the pick up tube. if i'm doing cleaning or rinse water i crack the quick disconnect off and on for a second, this works. Hot wort i mess with the hose and eventually, the hose fills. that's when i turn on the pump.
Other than that the system has been running very good. Still figuring out the app with the steps. I'm getting close to getting it figured out.
Remember, if you have the boil flag set, the temps won't be the same as your recipe. I set mine to 220 and just let the BB figure it out. And a #2 always just moves to the next step, so it looks like it skips it but the BB actually performs whatever you told it to do.
Yours:
1,Please remove the grain,212,0,1,0,0,1,0
3,Heating wort to boil,212,0,1,0,0,1,0
1,Boiling state reached,212,0,1,0,0,1,1
4,Maintaining Boil for 50 minutes,212,50,1,0,0,1,0
Mine:
1,Attach whirlpool tube,212,0,0,0,0,1,1
3,Heating water to boil temperature and storing value,220,0,1,1,0,1,0
4,Maintaining calculated boil temperature,220,90,1,1,0,1,0
1,Brewing complete,0,0,0,0,0,1,1
Hmmmm....I don't see anything obviously out of place, but I have a couple of observations;
1) I don't think the boil flag should be set here: "1,Please remove the grain,212,0,1,0,0,1,0", as you have stopped the brewing process.
2) I'm not sure why you do this step "1,Boiling state reached,212,0,1,0,0,1,1" since that will stop the brew process and wait for your input.
3) It might just be me, but I always set the Alarm flag whenever I set the type flag to a "1", since that tells me brewing has stopped, waiting for me to do something.
I brewed yesterday and my boil temp was set to 220 and it topped out at 210 with a boil slope of 28.5 seconds. I'm wondering if your grain removal/delay is messing up your boil slope.
From the Manual:
The Boil flag, if set to 1, tells the controller that it should detect boiling, once detected, store the temperature
value where the wort boiled for the following steps and then proceed to the next step. It is best
to set the setpoint for any step, where you set the Boil Flag to 1, to a value of 220F or 105C,
guaranteeing it reaches boil. Set this value to 0 when setpoints for mashing, etc. are set. The Boil
flag tells the application that we are not trying to reach a specific setpoint, instead, we want it to
determine automatically what the boiling temperature is for the current conditions. The
application looks at the slope of the temperature rise curve and determines when that slope
levels off, which is the point where the temperature ceases to rise. That indicates that the kettle
is boiling. At that time, the boil temperature is recorded, and the power is reduced to PwrB.
Make certain to set the Boil Flag for any step that involves boiling so that the program knows to
use the PwrB value.
I think it looks OK. I'm heading into work, but I'll take a better look tonight when I get home. I also have a recipe that I wrote up to mimic the Picobrew Zymatic 2 step mash, I'll post it up so you can see what that looks like.
I do have much more complicated recipes for various things that I've been testing out to record brewing efficiencies and such, but I'm not ready to divulge those yet as I'm still tinkering with them and analyzing the results.
This site may help you out some.. It is a Brew Boss Step Generator. I use this site when I am setting up a step file for a new brew. It starts you off with all the basic steps already there and is easily edited to whatever steps are needed for your particular brew.
http://brewingintheburgh.com/brew-boss/index.html
...I did learn last brew day that you need to be careful when lifting the basket though and don't try to force it...
I learned that if you are using an electric hoist....use the double pulley system vs just using it as a wench. The motor moves much too fast and the first time I lowered grains, I lost a lot of water over the side. Granted, I was doing a 16 gallon batch, so the water level was near the top. Once I added the second pulley, it operated much more smoothly and I was easily able to control the speed of descent.
I added a 90 degree 1.5" elbow with clamp and gasket off the dip tube and into the pump, which locates it below the kettle. Gravity will usually prime the pump.anyone else having a problem with the pump getting primed? In most cases i have to loosen up the tri clamp. Rotate the pump so it's at like a 45 degree angle.
Mike Howard, thanks for the step files for the Zymatic method. I have tried many things to get my efficiency up and this looks excellent (is this brewhouse or mash efficiency?).
I added a 90 degree 1.5" elbow with clamp and gasket off the dip tube and into the pump, which locates it below the kettle. Gravity will usually prime the pump.