I think I'll measure the temp of fermenting wort next week with a sanitized thermometer probe to validate some of these numbers in my system.
The bonus I found with the light bulb method is there is almost no residual heat to over shoot your temp. The bulb turns off and cools down quickly. When I tried the heating pad method, it saturated the wall that it was touching and caused it to slowly over shoot. However, I could see how this would be beneficial in a cold garage. OFC YMMV.![]()
Have you had any skunking effect from the light (or do you block the light from getting into your bucket/carboy)? That's my big worry with a light bulb.
And yes, I also get overshoot to the tune of about 0.3F (not bad, but not that great). I had to widen my deadband to +/-0.5F when I added the heating pad.
I have been using a standard 150w incandescent bulb....
Aren't those illegal now?![]()
It takes ALOT of energy (large specific heat), and hence time, to change the temp of 5 gallons of water.[/B]
I have a 1/2" thermowell I built and it sits inside my carboy I fill it with starsan and im pretty sure its the closest to the temp of the beer one can get. I feel that is very accurate can control my temperature very well.
-=Jason=-
try here - Brewers Hardware
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you get a 2-hole stopper - one for the thermowell, one for the airlock
because of temperature reaction time, you probably need to change the differential somewhat on your controller. - as in, by the time the cooling/heating system turns off, it will still impart action on that thermal mass we call wort.