I am new to brewing and so far, cooling the wort has not been an enjoyable task on the brew day (not that I like cleaning though!).
I brew in my kitchen, I have no access to a garden hose and the kitchen tap is difficult to interface with.
To overcome the limitations I feed water into a container and pump it to the wort chiller using a cheap pump I got from eBay.
So far this has worked fine, although the flow rate from the pump is low, which increases the time needed to cool the wort.
On top of that, my tap water often comes slightly below my pitching temperature so knocking down the last few degrees takes forever.
What I did last time is to use the water fed from the tap up to the point where the delta between water going in, water coming out was ~5°C and then just closed the loop (fed the water out from the wort chiller back to the container) and filled the container with ice. The ice brings the water in the closed loop down to 3-4°C and keeps it there, which allows me to reach pitching temperature quite fast.
Now, you are probably thinking why didn't just put the ice in the container in the first place and keep feeding water from the tap instead of closing the loop. Well, my heat exchanger isn't great, so even at a low flow, the water that comes out is not at wort temperature (specially when the delta between wort and water is small). If I kept feeding tap water to a bucket of ice, I just melt the ice away and then send cool water down the drain. If instead I close the loop and drip the return water on top of a pile of ice, the ice acts as a buffer keeping the water temperature down at ~3°C (I bet it would be even lower if I put more ice).
On a previous batch, I kept sending the water down the drain and run out of ice well before I reaching pitching temp. On this batch I closed the loop and ended up overshooting my temperature as all happened much quicker than expected. I didn't even melted half the ice I put in the bucket, which was a smaller quantity compared to what I used before.
Anyway, maybe not a problem for you, but if you are in a situation like mine, hopefully this info helps somehow.
I brew in my kitchen, I have no access to a garden hose and the kitchen tap is difficult to interface with.
To overcome the limitations I feed water into a container and pump it to the wort chiller using a cheap pump I got from eBay.
So far this has worked fine, although the flow rate from the pump is low, which increases the time needed to cool the wort.
On top of that, my tap water often comes slightly below my pitching temperature so knocking down the last few degrees takes forever.
What I did last time is to use the water fed from the tap up to the point where the delta between water going in, water coming out was ~5°C and then just closed the loop (fed the water out from the wort chiller back to the container) and filled the container with ice. The ice brings the water in the closed loop down to 3-4°C and keeps it there, which allows me to reach pitching temperature quite fast.
Now, you are probably thinking why didn't just put the ice in the container in the first place and keep feeding water from the tap instead of closing the loop. Well, my heat exchanger isn't great, so even at a low flow, the water that comes out is not at wort temperature (specially when the delta between wort and water is small). If I kept feeding tap water to a bucket of ice, I just melt the ice away and then send cool water down the drain. If instead I close the loop and drip the return water on top of a pile of ice, the ice acts as a buffer keeping the water temperature down at ~3°C (I bet it would be even lower if I put more ice).
On a previous batch, I kept sending the water down the drain and run out of ice well before I reaching pitching temp. On this batch I closed the loop and ended up overshooting my temperature as all happened much quicker than expected. I didn't even melted half the ice I put in the bucket, which was a smaller quantity compared to what I used before.
Anyway, maybe not a problem for you, but if you are in a situation like mine, hopefully this info helps somehow.