Total cost was $15.00 from the local rural supplies.


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Yeah I'm looking at ways to vent it outside the shop, and was looking at that flexi aircon tube to send it out the window.rad14701 wrote:Nice, Austin Nichols... Will that drum have a stove pipe with a damper...???
If you are going to vent it you might as well seal where the keg joins the shroud and fit a decent exhaust vent up neat the top of the drum. If you don't mind it being static then seal it with fire cement and use a cement / vermiculite layer to insulate the drum.Austin Nichols wrote:Yeah I'm looking at ways to vent it outside the shop, and was looking at that flexi aircon tube to send it out the window.rad14701 wrote:Nice, Austin Nichols... Will that drum have a stove pipe with a damper...???
Where the burner enters it there's a decent hole there for heat and fumes to escape.
Cheers.
You could resolve the scorching issue by only having the portion of the keg that always has liquid in it throughout the run shrouded... May or may not be a practical solution...bearriver wrote:Old thread I used when first starting.
I found using a shroud like this burns a hard stuck residue inside the boiler above the liquid level a few inches, even with a carefully cleared and racked boiler charge.
Without the shroud I encounter no burned residue whatsoever. Takes more power to run it, but it sure beats scrubbing the boiler for 30 minutes with copper scrubbers and BKF.
Done. Works a charm. It strips twice as fast, and the spirit run takes 1/3 the fuel I otherwise was using. No scorching.rad14701 wrote: You could resolve the scorching issue by only having the portion of the keg that always has liquid in it throughout the run shrouded... May or may not be a practical solution...
Did you notice any major changes in the %ABV of the resulting spirits throughout the run, by chance...???bearriver wrote:Done. Works a charm. It strips twice as fast, and the spirit run takes 1/3 the fuel I otherwise was using. No scorching.rad14701 wrote: You could resolve the scorching issue by only having the portion of the keg that always has liquid in it throughout the run shrouded... May or may not be a practical solution...![]()
I couldn't push enough power to achieve flooding conditions with lava rock, and without the shroud. Now I can with the propane valve half shut. Anyone running propane kegs should build one of these to save some serious coin on fuel.
Unfortunately I am not able to draw any conclusions, because I always run my neutrals at or near azeotrope.rad14701 wrote:Did you notice any major changes in the %ABV of the resulting spirits throughout the run, by chance...???