I don't think that's a fair comparison. As someone else stated in this thread comparing to what large breweries use doesn't always make sense. They have to be automated given the scale and the fact that they'd have to otherwise train dozens to run it. Automation becomes cheaper when the scale gets to a certain size.
You gave an example of your 20+ years experience to make your point that automation is not worth it due to simplicity and reliability. If it’s a system good enough for a large company like that, clearly they don’t feel the same about how you do when designing their setup. That’s all I’m getting at. Plus I don’t see any reason to not compare. Obviously my level of automation isn’t to their caliber, but most of our breweries aren’t to the caliber of most Nano breweries yet we still compare them or try to mimic them.
Sorry, I may have confused the issue. My 100+ hours was to completely automate with automatic valves, automatic hop additions, or whatever else you want to do to 'automate'. It has nothing to do with BCS.
Sure, this can be a valid point if we’re talking insane automation from start to finish with NASA precision. He wants hop additions and auto filling the HLT. Adding an electric ball valve for an auto filler and a couple magnetic push/pull solenoids for hop additions will hardly cost much and definitely wouldn’t add a massive amount of time to implement. The ball valves run like $30-50 and a 5v solenoid can be had for like a dollar shipped from China. I take electronics apart to salvage parts. I used the fill pump from our old dishwasher for my auto fill.
I find that an inherently dangerous thing to do, but that's just me. More below.
It’s all hypothetical to make a point, and people do dumb stupid stuff all the time. I’m sure there are plenty of real life scenarios that make the same point with out fear of danger.
If a system needs to be constantly monitored, it's not properly designed. I'm going to quote myself from my article to give my feedback on this and the last comment:
Seems a bit contradicting saying a system shouldn’t need to be monitors but then it’s dangerous to not monitor it. Regardless, it’s more for piece of mind to know things are happening.
At the end of the day there's certainly more than one way to make beer. If using automation (this is different from BCS) works for you, go for it.
It always come down to this. I understand the BCS isn’t automation, but it’s the solution for automation. I only use the BCS as an example because it’s the closest to a turn key solution for Homebrew automation. Most open source solutions would require more time.
comparing a hobby where a brew day is once every few weeks against a multi-national commercial giant that is brewing 24/7/365 is a stretch. that being said, pid or bcs seems fine to me. both do the job, it just depends on your interests. i have a pid setup and there are times where i say 'man, i wish i could be tracking this on my phone in the other room' but at the end of the day, it isn't like i am annoyed having pids. automation can be a challenge in itself and if that is your bag, go for it! i'm in the kal camp where i don't want brew day to be me pushing a button and coming back 6 hours later to wort in a fermenter. what's the fun in that?
I see no stretch. I made the point above. Most homebrewers strive to have setups or compare their setups to Nano breweries yet we don’t push the quantities they do. My automation is a baby version of theirs similar to how our breweries are babh versions of a commercial brewery. It’s all the same.
It’s tiring hearing people say they went with X because they want to brew and not just hit a button. If the temps change automatically and the hops drop by themselves, you’re still going to be working. I feel automation actually makes the brew process much more enjoyable. It’s not any different to having a brew assistant. It can be hard work and very frustrating sometimes.
I agree there’s nothing wrong with the PID or Kal Clone. I also feel he’s done a great job providing a resource for people and I admire it when people provide open source knowledge. It has nothing to do with that. It always ends with “do what works for you.”
But biased opinions are pushed and truths are stretched to make points. It’s that reason I get my news from The economist or BBC vs CNN or Fox.
Bottom line is I’m not a robotic engineer of 25+ years, but I know for damn sure the setup I made didn’t cost an insane amount or take an insane amount of time to build. And my setup is almost 100% what the OP wants. It actually will be 100% once I finish the tippy dump (got the parts already) and once I get the solenoids for the hop additions. I already have the other parts.
Somehow this thread became a condemnation of automation despite the OP’s request for it
I agree. I’m probably the only person here who actually has what the op wants. It’s funny too because it’s in my daylight basement with limited ceiling height, just like he mentioned haha.
I’ve been maintaining my stance because I have 100% experience of what he wants, even though it was not a turn key system.
Anyway, this horse is dead