I did the DIY rubbermaid cooler with the stainless steel braided manifold that came from a piece of toilet plumbing (new, lol).
When stirring my mash (after first strike), I pulled it with my mash paddle and it stretched at the base (nearest the valve) to the point where no wort could exit the manifold.
I tried to stick my hand in there to fix it, to try to push it back and widen it, but it was too hot. So there I was, deciding between second degree burns and throwing away my grain. I ended up going with a third option, pouring the grist into a big bucket, trying to fix the manifold, and dumping it back in. It sort of worked after that but was only a trickle so I ended up just dumping the sparge water in, stirring, and pouring it again into a big mesh bag and collecting the wort that remained.
Not ideal.
So anyway, what is the best way to make sure this doesn't happen again? I could recycle the mesh tube thing I have now, and just cut it shorter, or should I use a copper, PVC, or false bottom?
What is best?
When stirring my mash (after first strike), I pulled it with my mash paddle and it stretched at the base (nearest the valve) to the point where no wort could exit the manifold.
I tried to stick my hand in there to fix it, to try to push it back and widen it, but it was too hot. So there I was, deciding between second degree burns and throwing away my grain. I ended up going with a third option, pouring the grist into a big bucket, trying to fix the manifold, and dumping it back in. It sort of worked after that but was only a trickle so I ended up just dumping the sparge water in, stirring, and pouring it again into a big mesh bag and collecting the wort that remained.
Not ideal.
So anyway, what is the best way to make sure this doesn't happen again? I could recycle the mesh tube thing I have now, and just cut it shorter, or should I use a copper, PVC, or false bottom?
What is best?