So i did a somewhat chaotic brew day this sunday, but I still was able to gather some information in regards to HERMS and step mashes. All along the words
asymptotic kept coming to mind, and I had had this thought before, but never captured the data...but we will get to that. Initially i got my strike water up to temp using my HEX only, this is a pair of 1500 watt elements, that got me a 50F rise in temp in about 20 minutes(reading the lighter of the two lines in the graph(the herms sending side)) about 2.5 F a minute.
This is what is to be expected, nice clean flow, no pesky grain, everything is circulating. I got up to a low temp of about 122 for a nice step mash experiment, for this board specifically, so appreciate this already, cause the day gets ugly...
Anyway, I dough in and then get weird flow issues, so bad in fact that end up taking all 20lbs of grain and 5 gallons of water OUT Of the mash tun trying to figure out why the whole thing is stuck. About the time my wife joins me for a cup of coffee and i sit down looking at the mess i have on my hands(and arms) i notice that the inlet to the pump has about 3 inches of grain in the hose, ok back on track everyone back into the pull back to the original experiment, what's an hour or two extra in the mash time(it's a saison, I expect some killer attenuation)...that's basically all the data points from 1500-900, now the part we were talking about...
It's all going swimmingly UNTIL we get close to our mash temp, the differential on the return temp(the same as my target 152) and the mash temp decreases until it gets to a point that it will take an infinite amount of time before I ever actually get to mash temp. Since the returning liquid is the same as my target it can't actually raise the temp significantly as it gets close. I feel the graph shows this rather well. Also running cool mashes with the herms might be dodgy, what with stuck mashes and all that, although i don't know if what I had would really count, it was really a clogged pump. What fun! Up to my elbows in starchy mash...i guess I should be thankful it was only about 115F, it was like a nice hot tub, instead of a scalding kitchen accident.
For those interested, the square graph at the bottom of the graph is the HEX cycling on/off...The highest line(if it wasn't already obvious) is the return from the HEX, and the slightly lower line is the exit from the mash tun going into the HEX.
Cheers.
(and I can't tell you how close I came to just saying hell with it and doing a decoction.)