Originally Posted by: heeler If your fermenter is a 5 gallon bucket then just put in the house somewhere outta the way. Most folks keep their house comfy and that should be good for your yeast too.
Ya know it might have used all the sugar which turbo did you use?
There are definatley easier ways to control fermetation temp then what you described but if it works for you ok.
I bet in th future that worm in your wash will indeed creat a prob.
Remember sanitation is next to.....well just keep it under control. How do you close the lid with that setup?
Thank you all for your responses...
All my equipment is located indoors, in a nice, stable environment. You said that "it might have used all the sugar", is this possible? In a short 36-48 hours, that yeast ate almost 17 pounds of sugar? Holy $hit!!!!
My "worm" is made from a 10' length of 3/8" o.d. soft copper coil (8" dia.) that is submerged in the wash. The wash is in an Igloo, 10 gal. water container, similar to what working crews have at the back of their truck. The top screws on (1/4 turn) and can be left loose to vent, but I have a 3/4" hole at the top too. I put a light object over the hole that doesn't restrict gas out but would keep any critters out. Nothing touches the wash but the copper. Into this coil I pump cold water from a medium sized cooler where I add bags of ice or bottles of frozen water at +/- 4 hour intervals. The ice seems to melt within 1/2 hour and I simply cannot freeze water fast enough to replace. The water coming out of the worm was hovering in the 90*'s F. It got out of control on the second day (about 36 hours) after the yeast was added. Using "Hillbilly Stills" 48 hour turbo yeast (14% in 48/ 20% in 5 days) per package instructions (5 gal. water, 16.5 #'s sugar, 4.75 ounces yeast). Fantastic bubbling within 1/2 hour but thermal runaway became progressively overwhelming. Right now, it has been dead for the past 24 hours. I tried adding a small amount (2 ozs.) of yeast the previous day, it reacted and produced a small amount of CO2 for about 3-4 hours, then died again. Is this wash all messed up now? Am I gonna' waste a whole week or two and wind up with ammonia/vinegar or god knows what? I don't want to be a fool and keep it if there's the smallest chance it'll be bogus.
I know these newbie questions get irritating to your seasoned veterans, but try to remember when you first started. Wanted everything to be perfect. Like anything else i life, these things of quality, take a long learning curve. I tried to research and cover all the bases (impossible) from the get-go but as you can see, I have a major problem.
Are you saying that the copper submerged in the wash is a problem?
I was thinking of using a small auto radiator with a shroud/electric fan combo to cool the water in lieu of the ice or a combination of both. My question is how to keep this cool in an efficient manner?
I saw where fatboylo wrote about yeast energizer. I'd like to try this before dumping this wash. Is there a specific "energizer" I should get or are the choices the same thing?
You know, I started my fascination with making Alcohol way back when I was in 8th grade. We HAD to do a science experiment s that's what I did. I fermented Karo corn syrup with "active yeast" which was in the refrigerated section of the grocery store. That's where it all started; now some 48 years later, I started learning about this in an effort to supplement plants I grow indoors, with CO2, and thought this to be a great way to get 2 things from one action. Take and feed the CO2 to the plants, the plants gobble it up and thus the odor too, then use the bi-product (the alcohol) like you people do. Interest lies in making the purest, most tasty neutral spirits. Wither I use "essence" or not, I'll cross later. Right now, I just want to get up and running. I am a fast learner.
Again, I thank you all for your time and responses to this...