I'm itching to use mine . Gonna brew something within the next couple weeks .
I use it in the down position. I also do a dump the day before racking typically. CheersHow are you guys using the racking arm? I have done numerous batches without it but not sure what angle the arm need to be when racking?
Are you supposed to start racking with it up then slowly work it down?
This is what I was getting at, can you loosen the racking clamp and rotate the racking arm or would beer pour out causing mass hysteria?
If your dumping prior to racking the reasons to use the arm is to get most of the beer out of the cone but additional and most importantly it prevents trub getting into your pin/ball connectors/ serving kegs and plugging them which is a real pain. It's a must have imho. After spending this amount of money to still deal with plugged connector and sediment in the kegs would be unacceptable for myself. CheersThe only real benefit I can see to the racking arm is I noticed trub would settle in the conical port. Having the arm extended gets it away from the port. I just plan on having it pointed straight down.
If your dumping prior to racking the reasons to use the arm is to get most of the beer out of the cone but additional and most importantly it prevents trub getting into your pin/ball connectors/ serving kegs and plugging them which is a real pain. It's a must have imho. After spending this amount of money to still deal with plugged connector and sediment in the kegs would be unacceptable for myself. Cheers
Anytime. CheersOk with that racking arm trub cant fall into that section . And when you turn it down it allows you to get most of the beer out. I understand what your saying . This is new to me and apparently others too lol. I appreciate you explaining how these fermenters work .
...This is new to me ...
I have never had any issues with the lid leaking on mine. Additionally my lid gasket fits tightly and does not fall out when the lids flipped. I would say it's a defective unit or there doing something incorrectly. I can't think of how the gasket could even come out when the clamps on. CheersSo I'm a member of the Spike user's group on Facebook, and in the past week I've seen 3 people post that their lid gaskets won't hold pressure. One guy was even saying his lid gasket would blow out violently when he hit 9 PSI as verified by 2 different pressure gauges.
Is this a common problem that you all have experienced? Is this a design flaw that future buyers should be aware of?
By the time I'm ready to cold crash the psi has built up to around 10psi naturally.
... however if the psi was to drop to 0 and the fermentor is sealed you could crush it so be mindful when dropping temps with a sealed vessle.
Just ensure you always have positive pressure while dropping the temp down. CheersBy naturally do you mean you have co2 connected..?
Crushing a conical is one of my biggest fears. Is it only when going down in temperature that this may be a problem? How can a person operate to make sure this never happens?
By naturally do you mean you have co2 connected..?
Crushing a conical is one of my biggest fears. Is it only when going down in temperature that this may be a problem? How can a person operate to make sure this never happens?
So does that mean pressure lessens as temperature drops? And if so, at what rate? At first I thought: to have positive pressure I'd need to make sure there was enough co2 in there to not be completely absorbed by the liquid in addition to it changing due to pressure drop. I feel like its better to just have co2 feeding into it at a certain pressure. If that is the case then what is the minimum it should be to make sure my baby doesn't get crushed.Just ensure you always have positive pressure while dropping the temp down. Cheers
So does that mean pressure lessens as temperature drops? And if so, at what rate? At first I thought: to have positive pressure I'd need to make sure there was enough co2 in there to not be completely absorbed by the liquid in addition to it changing due to pressure drop. I feel like its better to just have co2 feeding into it at a certain pressure. If that is the case then what is the minimum it should be to make sure my baby doesn't get crushed.
Someone can correct me if needed, but two things at play-
1. CO2 is more readily absorbed into the beer at lower temps
2. Volume shrinks a little when lowering temperature
So if you don’t have some excess CO2 in there, the shrinkage and absorption will tend to bring down headspace pressure. When I get to this point I typically hook up my regulator at 5-10 psi and leave it on until I package. At 35*F and 5 psi you’ll end up just over 2 volumes if you let it sit (same for 40*F at 7 psi), that’s my MO.
Without checking a carb table I think you have it right.
The carb table shows beer temp on one axis and PSI on the other axis. If you hold PSI steady and chill the beer more CO2 gets absorbed and this shows as increase volumes. I used to think the main drop was from gas shrinkage due to the ideal gas law but after more evaluation I think the increasing solubility of CO2 in beer as temp drops is the greater impact.
I think your overthinking this. If you seal the fermentor at room temperature then cold crash to freezing a negative pressure will build and possibly damage your vessel. This can be avoided by connecting a co2 tank at .0001psi or more while cold crashing or just charging to 10ish psi prior to cold crashing. CheersSo does that mean pressure lessens as temperature drops? And if so, at what rate? At first I thought: to have positive pressure I'd need to make sure there was enough co2 in there to not be completely absorbed by the liquid in addition to it changing due to pressure drop. I feel like its better to just have co2 feeding into it at a certain pressure. If that is the case then what is the minimum it should be to make sure my baby doesn't get crushed.
I think your overthinking this. If you seal the fermentor at room temperature then cold crash to freezing a negative pressure will build and possibly damage your vessel. This can be avoided by connecting a co2 tank at .0001psi or more while cold crashing or just charging to 10ish psi prior to cold crashing. Cheers