_d_
Well-Known Member
Hello,
Today I built a counter flow chiller based on Bobby M's awesome tutorial. Thanks Bobby! I used 20' (thats the longest continuous piece home depot carried) of 3/8 OD copper tubing encased in 5/8 garden hose.
I tested it with boiling water just now. Using tap water at 71 F, the chiller reduced the boiling water from 212 F to 80 F. Unfortunately thats still a little hotter than I'd like to pitch at.
I was naively hoping I would be able to chill my wort to approximately the temp of my cooling water (~70 F).
Does anyone have suggestions on how to bump up my efficiency without using a colder water source?
Intuitively, I would expect that either increasing the flow of the cooling water or reducing the flow of the wort would allow more heat to be exchanged... so would either constraining the wort a little more or increasing the water pressure would help?
Thanks!
Today I built a counter flow chiller based on Bobby M's awesome tutorial. Thanks Bobby! I used 20' (thats the longest continuous piece home depot carried) of 3/8 OD copper tubing encased in 5/8 garden hose.
I tested it with boiling water just now. Using tap water at 71 F, the chiller reduced the boiling water from 212 F to 80 F. Unfortunately thats still a little hotter than I'd like to pitch at.
I was naively hoping I would be able to chill my wort to approximately the temp of my cooling water (~70 F).
Does anyone have suggestions on how to bump up my efficiency without using a colder water source?
Intuitively, I would expect that either increasing the flow of the cooling water or reducing the flow of the wort would allow more heat to be exchanged... so would either constraining the wort a little more or increasing the water pressure would help?
Thanks!