Ah, 3/16" is pretty tight.
I use a Riptide, and get a good whirlpool in my 23 gal kettle.
I use a Riptide, and get a good whirlpool in my 23 gal kettle.
It is. The CFC inner tube is 3/8”OD and the outer tube is 5/8”OD. To get a stronger whirlpool in the kettle I created a valved bypass circuit around the CFC. It all worked well for years with a MKII pump and hop spider. But I want to simplify and remove the bypass circuit and the hop spider. I do a lot of IPAs and kettle hops get around 7 ounces of pellets, mostly late and WP in 6.5 gal. I may just go ahead with the changes and run an APA first. I can always go back to using the spider. Thanks for your comments.Ah, 3/16" is pretty tight.
I use a Riptide, and get a good whirlpool in my 23 gal kettle.
I got a Stout CFC. Used it 3 times. Outstanding!!!Finally pulled the trigger on the Stout counter flow chiller. I won’t get the chance to use it for another month or so (in the process of moving), but first impression, this thing is built like a tank. I’m surprised by how heavy duty it is. Was packaged extremely well in the box too. Can’t wait to use it.
What is the inside diameter and length of tubing?Keep an eye out for the NEW Spike counterflow chiller we have coming out soon!
That info hasn’t been released yet but will be shortly. Stay tuned.What is the inside diameter and length of tubing?
Speed up your Brew Day with the NEW Spike counterflow wort chiller. The hot wort flows through the inner convoluted copper tubing, while cold water flows in the opposite direction through the stainless steel outer tubing. This unique design offers cooling speeds 4x quicker than our previous chiller!
I like the design and convoluted inner tubing. But I'm not going to put copper anywhere in my system, so will wait on a SS version. Longer total length would be good too. I'm currently using an all stainless Exchillerator, which gets the job done but has more restriction than desired (small inner tubing) and maybe also too short.Specs:
- 1/2" inner high efficiency copper convoluted tubing
- 3/4" outer stainless steel shell
- 16' total length
- (3) 1.5" tri-clamp fittings for wort in, wort out and water out
- (1) Standard garden hose fitting for water in
- 6.3" tall x 10.5" wide
What’s your concern with copper? There are actually a few benefits to using copper outside of way better heat transfer. We’ve tested stainless inner coils and it would need to be 10x longer to have the same cooling.There's a brief description on the page now:
I like the design and convoluted inner tubing. But I'm not going to put copper anywhere in my system, so will wait on a SS version. Longer total length would be good too. I'm currently using an all stainless Exchillerator, which gets the job done but has more restriction than desired (small inner tubing) and maybe also too short.
Copper is very widely used in brewing and distilling so there’s really not an actual concern there. PBW and Star San are fine.What are the benefits of copper?
My old copper IC gets gnarly looking, and then is shiny and bright when I pull it out, and I don't like all of that crap ending up in my beer. I don't really trust the copper where I can't inspect or manually clean it. And I feel better running hot PBW for cleaning through SS versus copper.
I can chill 10 gallons of wort from boiling to under 90F in under 15 minutes with my SS Exchillerator. Could be faster, sure, but it's not horrible. What's a copper chiller going to gain me, 5 minutes? That's not a huge difference and doesn't seem to warrant making the cooler 10 times longer. An extra few minutes is worth the tradeoff to me to keep everything stainless.
Primarily concern about coppper contributing to accelerated beer aging. As others have said, SS is also easier to clean. Completely agree that the heat transfer is much better with copper, but the other points are what caused me to eliminate copper.What’s your concern with copper? There are actually a few benefits to using copper outside of way better heat transfer. We’ve tested stainless inner coils and it would need to be 10x longer to have the same cooling.
Couple benefits of copper (other than being 30x more thermally conductive) are copper ions react with sulphur to form copper sulfate and this reduces the amount of H2S which gives the rotten egg/taste in beer. It also has been said that it can help with head retention.As for yeast pitch temps, that isn't really going to happen for me in the summer given my tap water temperature. But I just chill as low as I reasonably can, and let glycol take it the rest of the way.
But, you said there were benefits outside of the heat transfer, so I'm genuinely curious what they are?