Which plate chiller?
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    What is the difference between this 30 plate chiller and the Therminator? Other than this one is half the price and smaller I'm sure. Is the Therminator really worth the two bills?
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • frydogbrewsfrydogbrews
    Posts: 44,679
    @Lothos is the only person who has a therminator on here at the moment.

    i don't get mine til april.... ~X(
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    What do you have now?
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594
    Fewer plates = lower effeciency = slower chill rate = more water consumed
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    But I can't seem to find (haven't really looked) how many plates are in the therminator. Cuz it looks like about 30. Which brings me back to why is it awesomer?
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594 Accepted Answer
    It has "inator" in the name, of course.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • frydogbrewsfrydogbrews
    Posts: 44,679
    i can't say why it is awesome, but i know 4 people that have them and they all rave about it. tha'ts all i got, but its enough for me to buy one.
  • jlwjlw
    Posts: 16,454
    Lakewood said:

    It has "inator" in the name, of course.



    This

    image

  • BenSBenS
    Posts: 6,248 Accepted Answer
    Lakewood said:

    Fewer plates = lower effeciency = slower chill rate = more water consumed



    That's not entirely true. The longer that each plate is, the more surface area you get per plate. I bought this model http://www.dudadiesel.com/choose_item.php?id=HX2320BWGH and really like it. I can chill down 10 gal in about 5 min with my winter ground water temps. The total plate surface area is going to be you're determining factor for chilling power.
    There's no starting point. It's just a massive sea of shit to wade through until you find the occasional corn kernel. -DrCurly
  • BenSBenS
    Posts: 6,248
    And if you have 38F ground water like austin homebrew states that you need to chill as fast as they claim, I'm jealous of you. My ground water is 55F right now during winter.
    There's no starting point. It's just a massive sea of shit to wade through until you find the occasional corn kernel. -DrCurly
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146

    i can't say why it is awesome, but i know 4 people that have them and they all rave about it. tha'ts all i got, but its enough for me to buy one.



    ok here it is


    thumbnail.aspx.jpeg
    300 x 220 - 14K
    therminator.jpeg
    264 x 198 - 6K
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • jlwjlw
    Posts: 16,454
    For a plate chiller do you need a pump? I would guess so.
  • BenSBenS
    Posts: 6,248
    jlw said:

    For a plate chiller do you need a pump? I would guess so.



    Some plate chiller manufacturers say they work well using gravity feed but I wouldn't trust it.
    There's no starting point. It's just a massive sea of shit to wade through until you find the occasional corn kernel. -DrCurly
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    jlw said:

    For a plate chiller do you need a pump? I would guess so.


    this one you can gravity feed

    but i have a pump
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • frydogbrewsfrydogbrews
    Posts: 44,679
    yeah, i plan on getting a pump later, but i will have the chiller pumpless for a few months at least. same plan two buddies did and it still worked great.
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    it cools like none other i went from a 1/2" copper imersion chiller to my therminator big improvement on my batches and pitching temps
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • BenSBenS
    Posts: 6,248
    Lothos said:

    it cools like none other i went from a 1/2" copper imersion chiller to my therminator big improvement on my batches and pitching temps



    Agreed. I went from 3/8" 20 ft immersion chiller to plate chiller. Cut my chilling time from 45 min to 3 min.
    There's no starting point. It's just a massive sea of shit to wade through until you find the occasional corn kernel. -DrCurly
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    Lothos said:

    it cools like none other i went from a 1/2" copper imersion chiller to my therminator big improvement on my batches and pitching temps


    getting ready to convert to these

    Jet Burner - 8" diameter This high heat, cast iron burner ring has 20 jet nozzles, is designed for use with low pressure propane and can develop 200,000 BTU of heat. Gas inlet is 1/2" NPT. Choose Propane (with a COM#2 regulator/hose ) or Natural Gas. Weight 11#.

    jetc02-20burners.jpg
    1600 x 1200 - 714K
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • BenSBenS
    Posts: 6,248
    That is a big SOB. You should do a build thread when you install it.
    There's no starting point. It's just a massive sea of shit to wade through until you find the occasional corn kernel. -DrCurly
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    I'm installing 3 of them into my system

    this is what i have now
    3 of them
    CastIronBurner.jpg
    320 x 243 - 7K
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • jlwjlw
    Posts: 16,454
    BenS said:

    Lothos said:

    it cools like none other i went from a 1/2" copper imersion chiller to my therminator big improvement on my batches and pitching temps



    Agreed. I went from 3/8" 20 ft immersion chiller to plate chiller. Cut my chilling time from 45 min to 3 min.


    I use an IC and go to 70* or lower under 15
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    jlw said:

    BenS said:

    Lothos said:

    it cools like none other i went from a 1/2" copper imersion chiller to my therminator big improvement on my batches and pitching temps



    Agreed. I went from 3/8" 20 ft immersion chiller to plate chiller. Cut my chilling time from 45 min to 3 min.


    I use an IC and go to 70* or lower under 15


    But that's 15 minutes of exposed to bad air time
    not good

    At full speed on my pump i can bust out10 gal in 4 min to 68 deg using just my outside hose bib that has roughly 45 psi on it if i was out next to the well that side gives me 5 gal in 30 sec straight out the ground
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    Do you have problems with hops debris and cold break? If i get a plate chiller I'll have to use it pumpless for a while.
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594
    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.



    therminator is counter flow chiller\

    or mine is running that way
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    Lothos said:

    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.



    therminator is counter flow chiller\

    or mine is running that way

    I think he means a copper pipe inside a garden hose style counter flow chiller.

    I'm really pretty concerned about the debris issue. Party because I will be using it gravity fed for a while and also because i know me. I'm bound to cut a corner one day and just toss in pellet hops and then be screwed.
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • LothosLothos
    Posts: 2,146
    That could happen
    Ain't that a Bitch
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594

    Lothos said:

    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.



    therminator is counter flow chiller\

    or mine is running that way

    I think he means a copper pipe inside a garden hose style counter flow chiller.

    I'm really pretty concerned about the debris issue. Party because I will be using it gravity fed for a while and also because i know me. I'm bound to cut a corner one day and just toss in pellet hops and then be screwed.


    mine is copper pipe inside copper pipe, but yeah, that's generally what i was referring to.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.



    therminator is counter flow chiller\

    or mine is running that way

    I think he means a copper pipe inside a garden hose style counter flow chiller.

    I'm really pretty concerned about the debris issue. Party because I will be using it gravity fed for a while and also because i know me. I'm bound to cut a corner one day and just toss in pellet hops and then be screwed.


    mine is copper pipe inside copper pipe, but yeah, that's generally what i was referring to.


    Really? Can you give me a quick run down on the specs? Length and diameter of both pipes? Maybe a pic?
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594

    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    Lakewood said:

    Lothos said:

    No i have a false bottom for whole hop and i bag pellet hops and cold break not a problem



    i think this is a must for plates. i use a counterflow pipe chiller, so i dont have the same concerns. but i'm thinking i want to go this route for other reasons.



    therminator is counter flow chiller\

    or mine is running that way

    I think he means a copper pipe inside a garden hose style counter flow chiller.

    I'm really pretty concerned about the debris issue. Party because I will be using it gravity fed for a while and also because i know me. I'm bound to cut a corner one day and just toss in pellet hops and then be screwed.


    mine is copper pipe inside copper pipe, but yeah, that's generally what i was referring to.


    Really? Can you give me a quick run down on the specs? Length and diameter of both pipes? Maybe a pic?


    i started to do a build thread on it but solid works crashed and lost the model...

    heres a pic

    recolored Chiller.png
    600 x 353 - 254K
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594
    this one is about 20ft of pipe inside a pipe. you can make it longer, but i re-circulate the batch through it to chill and whirlpool at the same time so I don't need it to be very long to get the chilling rate im looking for.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    Well I'll be.... The main reason I want to go to a plate chiller is how it will fit into my rig build down the road. But that little guy looks handy. And i can't imagine you would have problems with debris as you might with a plate chiller. Is that 6 runs? Each about two feet long?
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594
    Yes 6 runs, a little more than 2 ft each leg. Of course the geometry is totally up to you, the caps are 1/2x1/2x3/4 reduction tees. Each leg is just a 1/2 pipe fed all of the way through a 3/4 pipe and a reducing tee shoved all of the way over so a bit of the 1/2 pipe sticks out the end on both sides. Then you can connect as many of these together as you want.
    You can increas efficiency by denting the inner pipe in several places. This encourages turbulent flow inside the pipes.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    I like the rigidity as well as the ability to design it into a rig. It doesn't have to be one set size or shape.
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    What kind of cooling capacity do you see? Rough cooling water input temp, batch size, and chill time? I'm trying to get I rough idea of what size is need to take 10 gallons to 65 with 52* ground water. I have an idea that i could use this as a gravity fed unit (wort side) for a little while until I get a pump.
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594 Accepted Answer

    What kind of cooling capacity do you see? Rough cooling water input temp, batch size, and chill time? I'm trying to get I rough idea of what size is need to take 10 gallons to 65 with 52* ground water. I have an idea that i could use this as a gravity fed unit (wort side) for a little while until I get a pump.



    i recirculate the entire batch through mine continuously while I chill. my chilling rate is highly dependent on season as my ground water can come out of the hose bib at 75 degF in the summer. In winter when the tap is yielding 50 degF water, i can chill ten gallons from boiling to 80degF in about 15 minutes, thats without running the hose full blast. running it wide open will cut that down a few minutes, but uses a lot more water. the important part, is that i can bring the whole 10gal below 150 deg in less than 5 minutes, so the late additions actually preserve their purpose.

    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • ThymThym
    Posts: 121,594
    and yes you can gravity feed through it. just start slow, with the cooling water running at a reasonable rate and keep increasing the wort flow rate until you hit your target temp.
    The only thing between me and a train wreck is blind luck..... - Kenny
  • C_BC_B
    Posts: 88,446
    I get 52* cooling water 365 days per year. The advantage to having my own well guess. Eventually I want to have a pump and recirc for the same reason you just mentioned. But one step at a time.
    "On it. I hate software." ~Cpt Snarklepants