sensibull
Well-Known Member
I'm in the process of converting an upright freezer to a fermentation chamber. A Love controller is on its way, but in the meantime I decided to do a little experiment last night.
I filled an ale pale with a couple gallons of water and put the probe of a digital outdoor/indoor thermometer into the water. Then I plugged in the freezer. When the temperature registered 65 I pulled the plug to see how long it would hold that temp (I was curious about compressor cycling times). I figured the temp would continue to drop slightly before leveling off, but was shocked when nearly a hour later the temperature was still dropping. It went nearly all the way to 50 before it started climbing back up.
Can I chalk that result up to the energy required to go from ambient (77) to 65, and assume I won't have such a wild swing when the temps have steadied more? I mean, I use the same method for my kegerator and haven't gotten any frozen beer.
Just trying to fine tune the process before I actually begin to ferment...
I filled an ale pale with a couple gallons of water and put the probe of a digital outdoor/indoor thermometer into the water. Then I plugged in the freezer. When the temperature registered 65 I pulled the plug to see how long it would hold that temp (I was curious about compressor cycling times). I figured the temp would continue to drop slightly before leveling off, but was shocked when nearly a hour later the temperature was still dropping. It went nearly all the way to 50 before it started climbing back up.
Can I chalk that result up to the energy required to go from ambient (77) to 65, and assume I won't have such a wild swing when the temps have steadied more? I mean, I use the same method for my kegerator and haven't gotten any frozen beer.
Just trying to fine tune the process before I actually begin to ferment...