The starter is not still going but was pitched about 2.5 weeks ago. I saw little activity in the flask with almost no kreuzen build up. No stir plate was used during the process. I didn't see a need to pay for one considering cost and had not looked into building myself. Something tells me they are easy to build and I can probably get all the pieces from RadioShack or a hobby store sans the stir bars. Thanks for the help
In a typical starter though, there's very little total available sugar for the yeast to actually process, so it's not uncommon to completely miss the actual activity. Usually everything's done inside of 24 hours.
Really? With a rigged stirplate I go from clear wort to high krausen and totally opaque in something like 24 hours. The krausen drops fast, but the smell of yeast activity is really obvious, very bready? And the wort is opaque tan. In my experience, the change is night-and-day...
Some folks don't want to pitch the starter wort, and so put it in the fridge and cold-crash the yeast out. This works best with more flocculant strains, but also gives a nice visual representation of the total volume of yeast post-starter...
The two starters I have done with my stir plate, I got pretty decent activity through the airlock for a while. About a 1/2 inch kreusen that rose and fell in about 24 hours. Nothing too impressive, but damn does it give the fermentation a kick in the ass.