Ouch did craft brewers kick your dog or something? What made you feel only macro breweries are reputable? we have lots of excellent smaller breweries making beers other than mass produced lagers that are very reputable. cheers
I was kidding man
Ouch did craft brewers kick your dog or something? What made you feel only macro breweries are reputable? we have lots of excellent smaller breweries making beers other than mass produced lagers that are very reputable. cheers
Aha damn Internet. It can be hard to tell sometimes. As majority of Craft breweries use a blowoff setup and typically aren't makings macro style lagers like the examples posted I thought you were taking a jab at them. CheersI was kidding man![]()
A spunding valve has an ID of 1"+. There is more force pushing up on the PRV with the larger diameter and the krausen can actually bubble through the larger openings rather than clogging. Even with a spunding valve we recommend using our PRV as it is designed to pop at 15psi. We would not recommend a Blichmann spunding valve as it has the same potential for clogging. We'd recommend a pro style similar to the ones SS and Stout offer. The key is the larger ID opening.
That is a pro-grade a spunding valve and it's pefectly suited. You can get one without the manometer if your tank already has one.1) Is this the type of spunding valve you are referring to in the first picture?
Having a vacuum break is not essential but it's definitely a plus and won't hurt your tank's performance in any way.2) Is there a downside to using the type of PRV I show in the second picture? It notes having a vacuum break which I imagine would work by letting air in. Assuming I keep pressure while cold crashing though, I'm not sure this would matter or is it better to get a prv without vacuum break?
You clearly haven't seen my fermenter. I got so much stuff attached at the top I'm afraid one day it's going to fall over from the sheer weight of the accesories...Currently planning to use a 4 way 1.5" TC cross from top port with prv, ball lock disconnect, and this elbow spunding valve with pressure gauge on third port. A little overkill but I think that would check all the things I could possibly want to do.
That is a pro-grade a spunding valve and it's pefectly suited. You can get one without the manometer if your tank already has one.
Having a vacuum break is not essential but it's definitely a plus and won't hurt your tank's performance in any way.
You clearly haven't seen my fermenter. I got so much stuff attached at the top I'm afraid one day it's going to fall over from the sheer weight of the accesories...
My only question would be 'where' on the fermenter is the spunding valve mounted in Pic #1? I have a nearly identical spunding valve to the one pictured. The connection fitting comes off a T that comes off the top mounted blow-off pipe. Upstream of the spunding valve on the blow-off is a diaphragm pressure gauge, and since the bottom is a frangible seal it cannot be clogged by krausen and will always give an accurate internal pressure reading of the fermenter. Downstream of the spunding valve is a ball valve shut-off and discharge line into a sanitizer-filled jar.
Brooo Brother
Thanks for the detailed reply. Attached photo is the set up I was thinking. Would allow me to use blow off tube for majority of fermentation and like you mentioned, shut it off during final portions to build up some pressure. My primary goal is to minimize cold side oxidation and I like the idea of being able to use spunding valve (or to force carbonate for pressure transfer) without having to take anything off (i.e. switching from blow off tube to gas manifold). Less interested with pressure fermentation although I am looking to do a lot of lagering so I wouldn't rule it out.
This set-up seem reasonable? overkill? any ways you can see to minimize bulk and accomplish same goals? It seems like only way using a spike unitank given they only have one 1.5" TC port on top.
Thanks for the detailed reply. Attached photo is the set up I was thinking. Would allow me to use blow off tube for majority of fermentation and like you mentioned, shut it off during final portions to build up some pressure. My primary goal is to minimize cold side oxidation and I like the idea of being able to use spunding valve (or to force carbonate for pressure transfer) without having to take anything off (i.e. switching from blow off tube to gas manifold). Less interested with pressure fermentation although I am looking to do a lot of lagering so I wouldn't rule it out.
This set-up seem reasonable? overkill? any ways you can see to minimize bulk and accomplish same goals? It seems like only way using a spike unitank given they only have one 1.5" TC port on top.
I wonder; somehow related? ...
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/forum/threads/how-much-pressure-can-fermentation-build-up.675384/
It's perfect but you're probably getting close to the fermenter's tipping point, at least when it's empty...![]()