BrewAlchemy
Well-Known Member
I just got my small o2 canister and my .5 micron. The last addition i need is a cheap, reliable flow-meter that reads in liters. Any recommendations?
http://picasaweb.google.com/kevin.ladue/BoilerControlPanel#5164685502424247906[/URL].
BrewBeemer, I spent about 1 year with the old system varying time and flow to observe the effects when using a ready to pitch vial to keep yeast cell count the same. High flow rates were pointless as all the O2 went to the top as foam and did not absorb, when the flow is reduced to where there is very little foam the absorption is highest. When I used 3 [email protected] CFH the yeast performed as described by the vendor, increasing the time raised the attenuation and fermentation speed quite a bit. The most suprising test was a 1.038 english bitter that fermented to 1.006 in 36 hours from fermentation start, and a 1.062 weizenbock with Wyeast 3056 that went to 1.010 in 72 hours from fermentation start. Both of the fast ferments were with 4+ minutes of O2 flow at .5 CFH.
Here is an after picture with panels in place and connected (bottom)http://picasaweb.google.com/kevin.ladue/Phase2ProgressPictures#5217507773381521138 and (top)http://picasaweb.google.com/kevin.ladue/Phase2ProgressPictures#5217507731685388290. The water tank in the back wall has gone away after some software changes to fill and sparge using level and flow sensors instead of measuring water in tank and then pumping it through boiler.
Yes the temperature affects the solubility of the O2, but if flow is at a higher rate you generate larger bubbles that rise quickly to surface instead of absorb like the small bubbles do, and the effort is mostly wasted. I would hope that the O2 injection is done at pitching temps around 65 degrees, not at post boil temps before cooling.
I had them years with one to 3 1/2 year contractors on push jobs, this made life better affordable after my back injuries. Work safe and bank all you can.The money here even without overtime last year was 4 times the other half's salary as a programmer for state of Oregon, this year looks like it will be 50 hour weeks soon, then 60-60-50 until mid to late 2012.