Thundercougarfalconbird
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2010
- Messages
- 760
- Reaction score
- 25
I used to love lego's when I was little. I always thought building stuff was in my blood. But now? Now, I don't know. I spend a lot of time and energy trying to save a buck by building my own brewing hardware. It has recently come to my attention that I could save a ton of money and have higher quality by buying stuff pre built. Being a college student, I'm sure my lack of tools has a huge effect on the quality of my work.
Lets start with my stirplate. Bought all the stuff at radioshack and lowes, ordered the magnets online. grand total-$40. I don't have a soldering gun so I bought quick disconnects. To my dismay you need a special tool to install them. I ended up using needle noses on the disconnects and a knife to strip the wires. I still have to dial it in when the magnets arrive in the mail. Coupled with 4 hours of screwing with it and the potential of it failing. Perhaps I should have just bought one.(I ordered the magnets thinking my radioshack/lowes bill would be lower bah!)
My kettle. I went aluminum. I think I actually saved money on this thing. Bought a step bit and weldless kit from bargain fittings. I ended up drilling the hole too big, And after destroying my hands on stainless steel threads, I bought the soldered kit. Thing works great now. I bought bobbym's sightglass, though I'm nervous about the precision of my calibration, it is still a thing of beauty. I bought bargainfittings whirlpool diptube with a 90degree elbow coupling. But I got cheap and bought a 3/8(or whatever that smaller size is) barb to save some cash. Damn thing is too small to get the tube to whirlpool on its own power. Had to order a new one.
Got a free 10gal square cooler. Made a mashtun outta stuff I bought at lowes(43bucks for the brass) The nipple that passes through the cooler wall was too small and the o-rings werent heat proof. I didn't understand how straining grain works and I just drilled a bunch of holes in some rubber tubing. Needless to say after an epic fail I bought a braid. I recycled the weldless kit from my kettle and bought the right size nipple for the wall. Thing is beautiful now.
My immersion cooler is 20ft because its the biggest lowes had. They didn't have the right size worm clamps so its without them still. I kinda kinked the pipe making the thing, and the garden hose fitting was almost $10. I could have bought a nice 25ft one for the the price of everything combined. I'm going to buy a new one sometime and use this POS as a prechiller.
I built a kegerator, thing is the biggest money hole of all. Saved a ton of money and got a 7lb tank for 33 bucks. due to its awkward size had to buy a stand for 35. So no money was really saved. Bought a used regulator, got a leak and bought a new one, turned out to just be the washer. Got a minifridge for $60 . LUCKLY I haven't hit a coolant line or I'd cry. After modding the inside to fit 2 kegs, the thing gets far too cold, capable of freezing beer. I bought an outlet timer instead of a controller because it was only like $10, I'll be replacing it with an analog controller, any reason why I shouldn't? Got two used perlicks for $40. Got a SS tower for like 90ish. I don't have a hole saw so I used a step bit to drill two holes for my beer lines. I drilled them too small and squeezed my lines into my fridge in my excitement. I clipped a line. 5 gallons of new castle(that I never got to drink) are now soaked into my carpet (any suggestions on a cheap way to get it outta my carpet?). $30 later I have a tower wrench and new lines on the way.
$48 heat stick hasn't killed me yet!
So why do I DIY? Because money is temporary, simply brewing doesn't occupy enough of my time, and I love what I'm learning to build from the forums.
Lets start with my stirplate. Bought all the stuff at radioshack and lowes, ordered the magnets online. grand total-$40. I don't have a soldering gun so I bought quick disconnects. To my dismay you need a special tool to install them. I ended up using needle noses on the disconnects and a knife to strip the wires. I still have to dial it in when the magnets arrive in the mail. Coupled with 4 hours of screwing with it and the potential of it failing. Perhaps I should have just bought one.(I ordered the magnets thinking my radioshack/lowes bill would be lower bah!)
My kettle. I went aluminum. I think I actually saved money on this thing. Bought a step bit and weldless kit from bargain fittings. I ended up drilling the hole too big, And after destroying my hands on stainless steel threads, I bought the soldered kit. Thing works great now. I bought bobbym's sightglass, though I'm nervous about the precision of my calibration, it is still a thing of beauty. I bought bargainfittings whirlpool diptube with a 90degree elbow coupling. But I got cheap and bought a 3/8(or whatever that smaller size is) barb to save some cash. Damn thing is too small to get the tube to whirlpool on its own power. Had to order a new one.
Got a free 10gal square cooler. Made a mashtun outta stuff I bought at lowes(43bucks for the brass) The nipple that passes through the cooler wall was too small and the o-rings werent heat proof. I didn't understand how straining grain works and I just drilled a bunch of holes in some rubber tubing. Needless to say after an epic fail I bought a braid. I recycled the weldless kit from my kettle and bought the right size nipple for the wall. Thing is beautiful now.
My immersion cooler is 20ft because its the biggest lowes had. They didn't have the right size worm clamps so its without them still. I kinda kinked the pipe making the thing, and the garden hose fitting was almost $10. I could have bought a nice 25ft one for the the price of everything combined. I'm going to buy a new one sometime and use this POS as a prechiller.
I built a kegerator, thing is the biggest money hole of all. Saved a ton of money and got a 7lb tank for 33 bucks. due to its awkward size had to buy a stand for 35. So no money was really saved. Bought a used regulator, got a leak and bought a new one, turned out to just be the washer. Got a minifridge for $60 . LUCKLY I haven't hit a coolant line or I'd cry. After modding the inside to fit 2 kegs, the thing gets far too cold, capable of freezing beer. I bought an outlet timer instead of a controller because it was only like $10, I'll be replacing it with an analog controller, any reason why I shouldn't? Got two used perlicks for $40. Got a SS tower for like 90ish. I don't have a hole saw so I used a step bit to drill two holes for my beer lines. I drilled them too small and squeezed my lines into my fridge in my excitement. I clipped a line. 5 gallons of new castle(that I never got to drink) are now soaked into my carpet (any suggestions on a cheap way to get it outta my carpet?). $30 later I have a tower wrench and new lines on the way.
$48 heat stick hasn't killed me yet!
So why do I DIY? Because money is temporary, simply brewing doesn't occupy enough of my time, and I love what I'm learning to build from the forums.
