Inline aeration with a diffusion stone attached to an oxygen tank.
^^ This at usually 1 liter per minute, sometimes more. ^^
Inline aeration with a diffusion stone attached to an oxygen tank.
I've since switched to a wand and I also just built a TC diffusion stone setup for my unitanks. I switched from a plate chiller to a cfc, and could have kept the inline setup but the stone had cracked without my knowing as it was cip'ed. Just got it setup, will be using it on my next brews.^^ This at usually 1 liter per minute, sometimes more. ^^
If I'm pitching dry yeast, I don't aerate.
If I'm pitching a fresh starter I will pitch it right off the stir plate since the yeast is active and has plenty of oxygen.
If I'm re-pitching without a starter I will pull out the wand + tank.
What do you to aerate your wort prior to pitching? Use oxygen? Shake the fermenter? Stir it fast/hard for a while? Something else?
Experimentally, pitching a 2-4L starter that's right off the stir plate (something like 10-15 ppm oxygen) into a split batch and then adding pure o2 to half didn't have any effect on either the speed at which fermentation took off or the final gravity.The yeast coming off the stir plate have been using the oxygen they picked up to build sterols and fatty acids, and using those sterols/acids to build cell walls for the cell divisions that they were doing in the flask. (They don't actually store oxygen per se.) They won't have built/stored much "extra" sterols (unlike the condition of dry yeast). But they'll still need to do more divisions in the beer wort, and oxygen could still be a limiting factor there.
TLDR: I recommend oxygenating wort that will be fermented with non-dry yeast, regardless of its "freshness" or starter type.
Experimentally, pitching a 2-4L starter that's right off the stir plate (something like 10-15 ppm oxygen) into a split batch and then adding pure o2 to half didn't have any effect on either the speed at which fermentation took off or the final gravity.