I'm currently using a Speidel 30L (have the 10 gallon one too but never used it) and though it works fine, it always smells like the last batch, despite soaking in cleaning solutions. Not sure that matters, but seems like it could. Wanting to get away from plastic, too.
So this particular 8 gallon Delta fermenter I'm considering has a base price of $385. It has a 4" tri-clamp on the lid along with 2 - 1.5" tri-clamps. The base has a 1.5" tri-clamp drain with butterfly valve, along with a 1.5" Tri Clamp Racking Valve and Racking Arm. Plus thermowell. And supposedly pressurizes up to 6 psi. It's all here if curious: https://www.deltabrewingsystems.com...tion/products/the-fermtank-8-gallon-tri-clamp
Delta is one place that will ship to my address in Alaska, and for under $100. A lot of the other vendors won't even ship, or some will for much more than a hundred. So there's that.
I'm wondering about how others might use it. I've built some of my own kettles, so can solder.. or use weld-less bulkhead fittings. Is anyone doing any of that?
I have my brew space in the basement so for fermenting, I use a terrarium heater and an old brewpi contraption for controlling it. For cold crashing though.. Delta offers a 4" tri-clamp cooling coil for $70, but that uses up the 4"er. A blow-off tube might use up one 1.5" tri-clamp port. Maybe a hop bong on the other, unless I go with magnets. I might want to add a gas-in port for racking to a keg without oxygen ingress.
Another issue I have is a too small of sink. So this Delta has a nice drain for cleaning.. wouldn't have to tip into a sink.
I've also considered configuring a 15 gallon Sanke keg as a fermenter but only do 5 gallon batches these days so worried if the head space is just too much. I could solder a 4" tri-clamp ferrule to the bottom, turn the keg upside down, and use the Sanke outlet (from what was the top) as a bottom drain. Add a few other ports for thermowell, racking, etc. I have a couple of those kegs around. Seems the fermenting would eat up the oxygen in the head space, but just not sure if it would be a detriment.
cheers, JD
So this particular 8 gallon Delta fermenter I'm considering has a base price of $385. It has a 4" tri-clamp on the lid along with 2 - 1.5" tri-clamps. The base has a 1.5" tri-clamp drain with butterfly valve, along with a 1.5" Tri Clamp Racking Valve and Racking Arm. Plus thermowell. And supposedly pressurizes up to 6 psi. It's all here if curious: https://www.deltabrewingsystems.com...tion/products/the-fermtank-8-gallon-tri-clamp
Delta is one place that will ship to my address in Alaska, and for under $100. A lot of the other vendors won't even ship, or some will for much more than a hundred. So there's that.
I'm wondering about how others might use it. I've built some of my own kettles, so can solder.. or use weld-less bulkhead fittings. Is anyone doing any of that?
I have my brew space in the basement so for fermenting, I use a terrarium heater and an old brewpi contraption for controlling it. For cold crashing though.. Delta offers a 4" tri-clamp cooling coil for $70, but that uses up the 4"er. A blow-off tube might use up one 1.5" tri-clamp port. Maybe a hop bong on the other, unless I go with magnets. I might want to add a gas-in port for racking to a keg without oxygen ingress.
Another issue I have is a too small of sink. So this Delta has a nice drain for cleaning.. wouldn't have to tip into a sink.

I've also considered configuring a 15 gallon Sanke keg as a fermenter but only do 5 gallon batches these days so worried if the head space is just too much. I could solder a 4" tri-clamp ferrule to the bottom, turn the keg upside down, and use the Sanke outlet (from what was the top) as a bottom drain. Add a few other ports for thermowell, racking, etc. I have a couple of those kegs around. Seems the fermenting would eat up the oxygen in the head space, but just not sure if it would be a detriment.
cheers, JD