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Low Cost (and SIMPLE) Grain Mill

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prandlesc

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I've read several project descriptions from brewers that built grain mills - and thanks to all those that worked out some of the details before me. I decided to build my own as a winter project. I had a few goals - 1) functional, 2) low cost, 3) simple.

I started with a Cereal Crusher mill. It came with a hopper that holds about 7# of grain and on sale was under $100. Next, I looked around to find what I already had - some 5/8" plywood, and some 2X4 and 2X6 leftovers. I used these to make my cabinet. The plywood leftover was 28" wide, to that was the dimension I used as the length of my cabinet. I measured the height of a 6 gallon plastic bucket sitting on my platform scale and added a couple inches for clearance. That determined the height of the cabinet. The width was determined by how much plywood I had left. I had some casters from an earlier project I didn't get to, so they went on the bottom.

To power the mill, I used a 1/2" heavy duty low speed drill I got on sale from HF Tools for about $40. There are several things that made using this drill a good solution for me; 1) it's designed as a low speed drill and is variable speed - I can adjust the speed without changing any pulleys, 2) it has lot's of torque - plenty of power, 3) it's reversible - with the flip of a switch, 4) it attaches to the shaft on my mill with ease - just tighten the chuck, 5) the trigger locks on - I don't have to hold it. I aligned the drill and the shaft on the mill (which required some shimming of the drill to get it to the right level), and then held it in place with a couple of stainless hose clamps.

I used an extension cord through a light switch to turn it on and off - strip a little insulation, cut the white wire, and attach to the switch terminals. I also use a foot switch so I don't have to reach for anything to turn the mill on and off.

I have my platform scale inside with the display mounted out where I can see it. This allows me to know how much grain I've added and how much more to add to fill my grain bill. I've used it several times and running 20# through it was a piece of cake. I did make a simple hopper extension out of some 1/2" MDF I had on hand which allows me to put 20# in the hopper all at once. It just slides in and out of the factory hopper when I need to use it.

Here's my new mill:
grain-mill-21-58888.jpg
marshfield-20130216-001321-58891.jpg
 
Looks sharp. I like the idea about setting up the the drill on a switch. One question though, why have the scale on the crushed grain? Why not just weigh your grain before you put it in the hopper?
 
Looks sharp. I like the idea about setting up the the drill on a switch. One question though, why have the scale on the crushed grain? Why not just weigh your grain before you put it in the hopper?

I decided to put my scale inside the cabinet for two reasons. First was simply to have a place to store it near where I use it and have it out of the way. It isn't fastened down to the bottom of the cabinet, so it can come out easily. The second was so that I didn't have to lift the grain twice. I'm buying the majority of my grain in 50# bags now, and it's one less step to pour the grain into the hopper and weigh it after milling than to weigh it first and then move it again. No real reason, other than laziness, I guess.

I do pull the scale out and weigh some of my grain if I'm putting 1 or 2 pounds into a separate container.
 
here is mine that I did. You can make it for around $210.00. I don't have a scale on mine but it works for me.
mill/15lb hopper 150.00
drill 20.00
speed controller 20.00
misc 20.00

https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f51/grain-mill-station-358310/

It didn't cost me near that much since I was given the 3 major components; mill, drill, and speed controller.



I really like the compact storage idea you had. Looks like a neat way to get it all out of the way.
 
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