Bishop,
Control of hot side oxidation is discussed in all text outside of "homebrewing" that I have read. Because you don't want to invest a cost in equipment does not mean you should criticize a method or others research. I would think a great deal of people here are trying to make the best beer they can, not what they can with the cheapest equipment.
Yes, some styles are going to benefit more than others and some styles may have flavors that are expected to be there that are caused by oxidation.
In the end this is a discussion thread about a brewing method, not whether you can be convinced to modify your equipment to try it.
You must have missed the part where it says, "possible" and "thought." -
Fig. 4.23
Possible stages in the oxidative breakdown of the major unsaturated fatty acids during mashing... It is
thought that the unsaturated trihydroxy-fatty acids...
Those two words indicate that it's a theory. Not fact.
Trust me, my investment in my brewing equipment is anything but cheap! I'm not saying, "Bah, this costs too much!" I'm saying that I didn't perceive any real difference in the finished product during my own experimentation and that for me, it doesn't warrant a change in equipment/technique. I'm not going to start fermenting in corny kegs, so a spunding valve is useless to me.
I know what this thread is about. Unfortunately, it's not an open discussion of a brewing technique. It's almost an argument with religious LODO zealots that want everyone to take what they say as gospel, and if you question them or don't follow their steps *exactly* you're making undrinkable swill. I still say there is more going on here than scrubbing oxygen when you dose the mashing liquor with SMB, and that's possibly the source of the difference in the mash. Their information is incomplete and they're drawing a lot of conclusions from incomplete data.
R.A. Heinlein said:
Daddy always warned me not to be cocksure when data is incomplete. 'Don't make so much stew from one oyster, Peewee,' he always says.
This was good advice in 1958 and it's relevant now.
What they're proposing adds time, cost and waste to an already expensive (in terms of water and power) endeavor with no concrete proof of an actual improvement. Their 'test mash' merely shows that there is a difference in mashing when you dose the water with SMB and that's
all it proves without lab work. These differences may or may not translate all the way into an improved finished product, so I tried it as far as I could with my existing equipment and detected no real improvement
in the finished product.