Please do! I want a club of on-demand fly spargers!!
That was the idea. I figured it should work as long as I didn't mix up the mash after putting in the sparge water. The wort has sugars in it, so it's higher density and should stay below the sparge water and basically act like a fly sparge. You do need a fairly big mash tun to hold it all. I have a 10 gallon cooler - it had 11.5 lbs of grain + about 7 gallons of water in total. Filled up almost full. Batch size was 5 gallons.
Next is to try and duplicate your on demand sparge heating but I have to upsize the RIMS heater first. It's too small for that right now.
My mash tun is only 7.5 gallons. I've been recirculating from the mash tun into the boil kettle and back with full boil volume. Any explanation why I can only get 62% while you get 80+? I doubt I can hold all the water in that mash tun as I like a little higher gravity.
Finally, are you talking mash efficiency or brewhouse efficiency? Brewhouse efficiency equals mash efficiency times fermenter volume divided by post-boil volume. The more wort/trub you leave in your BK the bigger the difference between your mash efficiency and your brewhouse efficiency. Comparing your brewhouse efficiency to someone else's mash efficiency can make things look worse than they actually are (I don't know if Wizard is stating mash or brewhouse.)
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If you mash with say 4.5 gal strike water, and then add and mix (recirculate) 3.5 gal of additional water, the lauter efficiency will be the same as if you mashed with 8.0 gal of strike water initially. Sparging involves rinsing residual sugar out of the grains with fresh water. To do something like a fly sparge, you need an HLT separate from the BK, or an MLT capable of holding the total mash volume plus sparge volume. In the second case the sparge water would get added (potentially from the BK) on top of the mash with care taken to minimize the mixing. Then when you run-off, the concentrated wort drains first, and then the fresh water that was on top of the mash washes thru the grain bed. Since the top water has very low sugar concentration, it picks up residual sugar from the grain, much like a traditional fly sparge. This is what @Wizard_of_Frobozz described a few posts above.Im talking brewhouse. I dump everything in from my boil kettle to the fermenter. I account for loss in my mash tun but I do the best I can draining it.
I may keep my rims the same and just add a hlt.i have a five gallon cooler, I would just have to put a ball valve on it. Then I could at least fly sparge. Would there be enough liquid to recirculate? I don't know yet, but it's worth a shot.
Another thought... could I mash for say 30 minutes and heat a batch sparge to my target temp then recirculate the whole thing? I could still raise the temp to mash out towards the end. Still be two vessel and not have to worry about hoses so much.
Please do! I want a club of on-demand fly spargers!!
My mash tun is only 7.5 gallons. I've been recirculating from the mash tun into the boil kettle and back with full boil volume. Any explanation why I can only get 62% while you get 80+? I doubt I can hold all the water in that mash tun as I like a little higher gravity.
For one thing, you are doing a no-sparge process, whereas @Wizard_of_Frobozz is sparging. That alone is good for a 9 percentage point difference in lauter efficiency (see the chart in post #2 in this thread.) Also, are you leaving significant liquid volume in the bottom of your MLT? That will reduce you lauter efficiency below what is shown in the referenced chart.
Remember that your mash efficiency is your conversion efficiency times your lauter efficiency. It's quite possible that your conversion efficiency is low (it should be 95% or better.) You need to measure your conversion efficiency using the method here to know where you stand.
Things you can to do to improve conversion efficiency:
- Crush as fine as you can without getting a stuck mash
- Mash for longer time
- Control mash pH (if you don't already)
Finally, are you talking mash efficiency or brewhouse efficiency? Brewhouse efficiency equals mash efficiency times fermenter volume divided by post-boil volume. The more wort/trub you leave in your BK the bigger the difference between your mash efficiency and your brewhouse efficiency. Comparing your brewhouse efficiency to someone else's mash efficiency can make things look worse than they actually are (I don't know if Wizard is stating mash or brewhouse.)
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I have a question about your BK. You said that you use a RIMS heater on the BK to heat the mashtun. Do you also use another heat source in your BK for boiling? Electrice? Gas?
Is your RIMS 240v?
What do you use to recirculate into the mashtun? A sparge ring, auto sparge, hose, etc?
Btw you have any links or pics of your build. As you may have guessed I am very curious about it.
Hi everyone,
How's all your 2 vessel HERMS systems going?
I've been planning on going this route for a couple of years now. Up until now I'm indoor electric 19 gallon BIAB.
I finally ordered a nice 50' 1/2" stainless coil for my next BK/HLT that will be 25 or 30 gallons depending on what deal I can find. At first I think I'll just use my existing BK as a MT with a custom made false bottom. Right now I'll make due with one pump (march center inlet) but envision eventually using two.
I like what I'm reading in this thread and I think a system like this has a lot of potential and many combinations of mash volume, thickness, no/sparging.
Have you guys seen these videos? A source of inspiration, for sure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28kYMdQsqjQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqO8r5TocIc
Cheers!
Hey! Thats ME.
That's awesome! I have so many questions considering I'm building a similar system, but not automated.
The first one is, are you still brewing on that? I'm gonna check out your sig links before I ask more...
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As far as I understood the process, with these 8 steps it should be possible to brew a beer. In step 5 I add the sparge water while the mash water (is that the correct term?) is still in the pot. So sparging probably works out a bit less effective, but still better than no sparging at all.
In total I would need two vessels, a heat exchange, two pumps and 8 valves.
Do you guys think that this would work out ok? Has anyone (used) a 2V-HERMS?
Most HERMS systems use a 3-vessel system, but I was wondering whether it's also possible to do it with 2 vessels. I couln't find a lot of info on this. But one needs less valves, just two vessels, but a separate heat exchanger, so it could be more cost effective. A disadvantage is that sparging is harder to do, see the attachment for my idea.
As far as I understood the process, with these 8 steps it should be possible to brew a beer. In step 5 I add the sparge water while the mash water (is that the correct term?) is still in the pot. So sparging probably works out a bit less effective, but still better than no sparging at all.
In total I would need two vessels, a heat exchange, two pumps and 8 valves.
Do you guys think that this would work out ok? Has anyone (used) a 2V-HERMS?
BTW: please correct me if I'm using wrong terms, beginner here
View attachment 393727
Awesome post, @Wizard_of_Frobozz ! So is the duty cycle what the SSR acomplishes with your PID? So if you had an EZboil from Auber, it seems like you would be able to mess with this power reduction? I guess the PID that you use with your mash recirculation would be set with a duty cycle, and then the boil PID would just be set full blast. Or if you have a nicely sized RIMS tube that keeps your wort velocity in a good range, you don't have to worry at all.
That seems like a valid concern with the RIMS Rocket. I've heard some people on these forums having some issues with the RIMS rocket, but I'm too much of a novice with the electric setups to know if it's the same issues as a RIMS tube. I definitely like the cost of putting together a RIMS tube vs the cost of a RIMS Rocket.
Since you're using a kettle element and a mash recirculation element, did you make the move to 50 amp? If so, what controller are you using/did you build a controller?
I am going to bite my tongue (thumbs, actually) and avoid what I would love to be a philosophical discussion. This has nothing to do with you corneyl... you just lit my fire with the 2-vessel thing which has been on my mind.
So let's help you out... I think 2 vessels is the way to go. All the benefits of multi vessel without a wasted on (the HLT). I think your idea is sound, and as you noted sparging is the only hiccup. The problem you have fundamentally is no third place for water or wort. So you have to make a choice during the sparge:
1. Drain you initial runnings into a bucket.
2. Drain your runnings in into the BK, along with the remaining sparge water.
3. Put all your sparge water into the MLT and drain into the BK.
4. Batch sparge once.
Given these choices, I would NOT do #2 or #4. As Doug said 2 is like a full volume mash. I don't agree it is the same, but you won't get the best efficiency doing this because of course, you are pumping extracted sugars back on to the mash surface. 4 is just plain silly to me. #1 is more manual than I like but you could do a normal fly sparge.
But i see no downside to #3 other than some lost efficiency. Put your entire sparge volume on top of the grain bed without mixing, then drain into your BK until you hit your pre-boil volume. I think that will work well.