My initial plan was to setup the BCS to open a valve (which I already have) that will fill the HLT with water, and then when the float switch activates at the top, to turn off the water filling valve when the kettle is full. I could remotely fill the HLT this way the day before I plan to brew (my RO tank will hold about 12-13 gallons, so this does take some time to regeneration once the stored water has been drained). I would need to setup all the cleaned gear of course for this to work as planned and make sure all kettle valves are closed!
The thought was then to remote heat to set point, so that when I wake up, make coffee etc, and stroll into the brewery, it would be ready and waiting.
Also there are usually slightly different mineral additions to the sparge water and mash water. Clearly I'll need to brew on this for a while before the best way to use and setup my system to its best time saving efficiency becomes apparent. Unless I add additional electro-mechanical ball valves and plumbing and a flow meter to the mix in order to heat the entire HLT to strike temp, then pump the specified volume of water over to the MLT and then maintain the MLT & HLT water at the strike temp until I'm ready to dough in, then it looks like I'm going to need to keep a part of this process manual. I'm sure between BeerSmith and the BCS that I'll be able to dial in precise strike temps after a few sessions.
One issue that presents itself is the volume measurement. My system will only have one sightglass (on the HLT). I think that will be fine as long as I can find a way to accurately measure the volume of water in the MLT. I suppose the best way would be to measure the volume of water that will be "trapped" in the tubing and pump between the HLT & MLT circuit during the transfer and note the deltaVolume on the sightglass to get fairly accurate mash water volume.
TD