klyph said:Have you considered beefing up the lid insulation with spray foam? Most of the lids are just hollow plastic.
- brass square head plug (Watts A-737)
why is this needed. i dont get the plug factor, shouldnt it flow out???
I wanted to ping the group to see if anyone out there has had any issues with mash temperature stratification. I am fairly confident that my mash tun will hold the temp within 1 degree F near the bottom of the mash tun, but I am thinking it is a different story near the top. I am zeroing in on this as my issue with my finished beer since my attenuation numbers are in the 80 percentile. The other indicator is that my ABV is usually .75% to 1% over my target ABV. Now my SG is always within .0002 of my target. Thus, I am back to my mash as the culprit.
Anyone have any ideas short of going a RIMS route?
-Pikeman94
I have used my 5 gallon cooler a lot more than the 10. I stir the mash once or twice during the hour because it gets cooler on the bottom. The top layer at first seems extremely stable, but it is so only because it is fed heat from below. The bottom layer cools first. I am converting to RIMS for this reason, and to be able to do step mash.
Quaffer - With removing the lid and stirring, did you maintain your target temp?
Nope. It would not be maintained anyway except for at the very top layer. The bottom layer will drop way below target, so by stirring it the temperature evens out throughout the mash. In the 5 gal cooler I drop about 3°F over 60 minutes. It should be less than that in a 10 gallon cooler but I don't have much experience with it yet.
So I went to my lhbs today...
I talked with one of the more knowledgeable staff members about using a ten gallon cooler as my mlt and she recommended not to use one. She said they're not food grade (not what the description of the cooler says) and that you shouldn't use one because you can't heat it up at the end of the rest (I havnt read anywhere that this is necessary.) She also advised not to use one because her friend brewed a batch and it ended up tasting like bubblegum.
Can anyone shed some light on any of this? Seems like everyone has had good success with their mlts, so her information caught me by surprise.
Paul, the bubble gum flavor could be coming from the fermentation stage. If you don't hit that all magical 68 F, then you are going to notice other flavors in the beer. In my experience when I just left the beer in the basement and didn't pay attention to temp I got banana/bubble gum flavor. Come to find out my fermentation was hitting 72F-74F.
Now, I am noticing that these coolers are not holding a solid 154F temp throughout the mash. As others have stated the bottom of the mash will be significantly cooler than the top.
I am embarking on an experiment to try and "fix" this issue. I will keep the forum updated on my findings.
Sigh....That is what I feared. Since I don't have a large enough mash kettle, I may be forced into the RIMS world.
Of course I will have to test this out with about 6 gallons of water in my 10 gallon mash tun. I would lean towards how your mash tun is performing though.
One thought I had to try to combat this issue was to change out my tube with stainless steal mesh braiding for copper tubing with the stainless steal mesh braiding. Then, I could insert a paint stirring paddle through the lid and operate with a drill at a very low speed. My thought is that this would keep the temp mixed and stabilized throughout the mash.
Thoughts anyone?
So I went to my lhbs today...
I talked with one of the more knowledgeable staff members about using a ten gallon cooler as my mlt and she recommended not to use one. She said they're not food grade (not what the description of the cooler says) and that you shouldn't use one because you can't heat it up at the end of the rest (I havnt read anywhere that this is necessary.) She also advised not to use one because her friend brewed a batch and it ended up tasting like bubblegum.
Can anyone shed some light on any of this? Seems like everyone has had good success with their mlts, so her information caught me by surprise.
The 10 gallon cooler has smaller surface area to volume ratio so it should perform better than the 5 gallon one.
This is true but for a given volume up wort, you would be better off with the a smaller cooler, the greatest heat loss is going to be at the area of the valve, the bottom of the cooler and the top. By going with a larger tun you will be increasing the 2 of 3 areas of greatest loss. This assumes the 10gal is of greater circumference. Also, the headspace has just been increased. Honestly I don't know if you will see much of a difference.
FWIW, I see about a 1 to 1.5 degree drop with mine, with about .5 degree variance with stirring, this is at about 65 degrees ambient.
It is best to use the smallest mash tun that will hold the mash, agreed 100%. Use the 10 gallon tun only for 10 gallon batches.
I guess the lid will be the area of greatest heat loss, being large and not insulated. Some inject it with foam to improve it, but I have not. That might shave a degree off my heat loss.
@rexbanner: I am building this and having my own challenges, but to address your collapsing braid i read a post where a person used copper wire 10-12 gauge and coiled it. Then elongated the coil and inserted in the braid. That may stop the braid from collapsing. I also just read on another DYI post where a person used a SS spring and inserted into the braid. Finally after reading your post I might just buy a false bottom.