ctrl_alt_del3t3
Member
i have a plate chiller and chilzilla , which one is better? I have not used either as of yet
i have a plate chiller and chilzilla , which one is better? I have not used either as of yet
That's not entirely accurate. A *lot* depends on the design of the counterflow. I've got a ZChiller, after having had a plate chiller. The ZChiller is just as fast and uses roughly the same amount of water, it's just far, far less likely to get clogged and is vastly easier to clean.
That's something to consider... I currently use a whirlpool and immersion chiller. I usually 2 stage it, boil to 100° on tap water, then switch to recirc ice water in bucket... but recirc ice water through a cheaper plate chiller as a pre-chiller would be something to consider.I use my 2 zone plate chiller to super chill my cooling water.
Amen to this, The easily clogged "twisted pathway" of the therminator has give plate chillers a bad rap here.All PCs are not created equally, so folks should be careful what conclusions they draw from anecdotes.
Eg: the short Blichmann Therminator is a low-performance PC when compared to the popular DudaDiesel long 30 plate model.
That noted, there's no doubt a well-built CFC will be easier to clean than pretty much any PC, and that pretty much any PC is prone to debris building up and eventually plugging channels.
If speed is the priority then a good PC will most likely have an advantage.
If ease of use is the priority then a good CFC will definitely have the advantage...
Cheers!
Amen to this, The easily clogged "twisted pathway" of the therminator has give plate chillers a bad rap here.
While I agree thats is very true. The therminators short plate and unique does make it more prone to plugging up and less forgiving than all the other options (and less effective at chilling than a longer plate chiller with half as many plates and 180degree bends to collect debrees.) Since its the most advertised chiller its also the most common among homebrewers who shop by brandname recongnition rether than researching what they buy, despite being the most expensive option for what you actually get performance wise. Short chillers are normally cheaper to manufacture judging by the normally much lower price and performance vs longer chillers. the therminator has an advertized unique twisted pathway design which I believe may actually make it more prone to plugging up as well vs straight channels.I’d disagree and say that lack of education and poor technique have given plate chillers a bad name. You absolutely have to manage hop material in your wort when using a plate chiller or you will have issues, regardless of who makes it, how many plates there are, or how long it is. I have a Therminator that I have used dozens upon dozens of times with zero isssues, including on very hoppy beers.
I think most most Homebrewers new to plate chillers probably don’t understand the lengths you really need to go through to keep them debris-free.
You leave them in there all the time? No degradation?Clearly not a fool. Asking questions, gathering data, weighing pros and cons, then making decisions. I want to be that kind of fool when I grow up. If I ever grow up.
6 feet of hose? Pretty hard to clean, yeah. That's about twice my longest run. Anything under 1/2" id makes it tough, also.
They make pvc toilet flanges with a molded in seal to keep trash out of the pipes during costruction. I used one of these and a piece of pipe to make a free standing soak tank for hoses. After I flush them with garden hose water, I put a piece of coathanger wire through the camlock rings and drop them into a pipeful of sanitizer. They hang vertically so no trapped air. When I think of it, I churn them up and down to get fresh fluid in the tubes. No mold in them pipes.
This depends on the sanitizer used.. Star san will degrade copper like in a plate chiller over time but wont harm stainless. It will degrade silicone by turning it chalky white over time too from what Ive found. bleach will eat stainless (thankfully its not used often for brewing)You leave them in there all the time? No degradation?
Did you didnt attempt prefilter these solids out when you used it for wort?I’ve been using my thermintor exclusively for strike water chilling for a year now and it still blows out hop debris and cold break every time I use it.
Did you didnt attempt prefilter these solids out when you used it for wort?
Because I never have anything come out of my plate chiller but ive used hop spiders for everything since Ive implemented its use.
Clearly not a fool. Asking questions, gathering data, weighing pros and cons, then making decisions. I want to be that kind of fool when I grow up. If I ever grow up.
6 feet of hose? Pretty hard to clean, yeah. That's about twice my longest run. Anything under 1/2" id makes it tough, also.
They make pvc toilet flanges with a molded in seal to keep trash out of the pipes during costruction. I used one of these and a piece of pipe to make a free standing soak tank for hoses. After I flush them with garden hose water, I put a piece of coathanger wire through the camlock rings and drop them into a pipeful of sanitizer. They hang vertically so no trapped air. When I think of it, I churn them up and down to get fresh fluid in the tubes. No mold in them pipes.
I suspected I wasnt getting full hop ulilization but after making a scalpin ipa clone which came out great and then comparing the same recipe of a pils a friend brewed without one I dont see the difference. still I use 2 6x14 hop spiders when I brew anything with more than a couple ozs so the additional surface area might make the difference.I used a hop spider most, but not all of the times. I didn't know initially how clog prone it was going to be so i just free balled it the beginning. Once i learned the hard way, i hop spidered everything until i realized how bad my hoppy beers were turning out. Then i switched to an IC and life has been better ever since.
What is a better chiller. All copper counterflow
View attachment 559890
or one with rubber hose?
View attachment 559891
[...]Does anyone have any input?
Performance will favor the copper model, maintenance will favor the stainless version.
But one can manage performance via throttling, so I'd go with the stainless chiller...
Cheers!
Enter your email address to join: