Pot Still design question
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Pot Still design question
My old pot still was a tea kettle, 1/4 inch copper tubing and an 1100 watt electric burner. I wanted to build something small and cheap at first while I learned what I was doing. I recently purchased a 5 gallon stainless pot and made a few runs. Everything works fine but it takes a LOOOOOONG time to go through a 5 gallon wash, the first 3.5 gallons took 14 hours.
I was wondering if rebuilding it with 3/8 or 1/2 inch copper tubing would help speed things up. Or if I need to get a bigger electric burner. Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks
I was wondering if rebuilding it with 3/8 or 1/2 inch copper tubing would help speed things up. Or if I need to get a bigger electric burner. Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks
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- Novice
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please, explainI dont belive in electric at all, its not constant
for as far I know, it's the most constant way to heat.
evilive, the only way to make your runs quicker will be by adding a new heater, or an entirely new one. stronger then the one you have right now. 14 h is a very long time for some gallons
-I have too much blood in my alcohol system-
[quote=" I dont belive in electric at all, its not constant.[/quote]
In theory you are correct, however in practice (unless you live in the back of beyond) it should be constant enough for the purpose of distilling alcohol. Simply test - do your lights noticably brighten and dim over an evening. If not consider your electricity constant. It is also a lot safer than any other form of heating.
In theory you are correct, however in practice (unless you live in the back of beyond) it should be constant enough for the purpose of distilling alcohol. Simply test - do your lights noticably brighten and dim over an evening. If not consider your electricity constant. It is also a lot safer than any other form of heating.
Never do tomorrow what you can do today because if you like what you do today you can do it AGAIN tomorrow!
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I'm with Ozark, I won't have anything to do with electric heat either.
Propane is simple and instantanious and safe and best of all there's no f***** around with reostats and bigger elements and smaller elements.
Do a search on here for electric heat elements and read all the bull**** that guys have gone through to try to make em work properly.
With my set up if I need more heat, I turn the valve counter clockwise, if I need less I turn it clockwise. What could be a more simple, constant heat source than that?
As always JMHO.
Propane is simple and instantanious and safe and best of all there's no f***** around with reostats and bigger elements and smaller elements.
Do a search on here for electric heat elements and read all the bull**** that guys have gone through to try to make em work properly.
With my set up if I need more heat, I turn the valve counter clockwise, if I need less I turn it clockwise. What could be a more simple, constant heat source than that?
As always JMHO.
Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will sit in a boat all day and drink beer.
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I have found electric elements to be much easier than gas and have never had any problems 'constant' type problems, it seems pretty constant to me. Ozarkwhiskey - im pretty sure unless its to do with AC power alternating or something that elements dont turn on and off, its the water they are sitting in that keeps them from burning up.
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- Bootlegger
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If i can go back to the original question.
My rig evolved from the one picture in my icon to the above description. For what it is worth i wouldn't go under and 1" dia and 12" high column. I tried so hard to go cheap that i ended up spending twice as much as if i had just sucked it up and built my current rig to begin with.
Also the bowl on top is in fact SS. I'm quite sure of it. But it is flimsy so I need to stay it with bungee cords, which pull double duty to secure the lid so that no vapor leaks.
If I can add to the electric vs gas debate. Can I assume that since the original rig was a tea kettel that the 1100 watt element was a stove top burnner? If so I also ran my original rig on the stove top. The elements on stove do cycle on and off. The hot water heater type elements that most seem to use in kegs don’t seem to vary quite as much. Bottom line is that I would get 2 degree temp fluctuations on the stove top, which is why I went to the camp stove.
This isn’t a great picture but you ge the idea.
My boiler is about 4 gal so we are in roughly the same boat. I went with a 1"X18" high column with a condenser that is 1/2" X 24" wrapped in a 1"X16" water jacket. i was running @ about 600ml/hour or 20oz/hr. I started collecting @ about 85%abv and collected down to 65% for an average of 70% when I was done. I use a propane camp stove as the heat source and hook the condenser up to the kitchen sink.I was wondering if rebuilding it with 3/8 or 1/2 inch copper tubing would help speed things up. Or if I need to get a bigger electric burner. Any advice would be appreciated.
My rig evolved from the one picture in my icon to the above description. For what it is worth i wouldn't go under and 1" dia and 12" high column. I tried so hard to go cheap that i ended up spending twice as much as if i had just sucked it up and built my current rig to begin with.
Also the bowl on top is in fact SS. I'm quite sure of it. But it is flimsy so I need to stay it with bungee cords, which pull double duty to secure the lid so that no vapor leaks.
If I can add to the electric vs gas debate. Can I assume that since the original rig was a tea kettel that the 1100 watt element was a stove top burnner? If so I also ran my original rig on the stove top. The elements on stove do cycle on and off. The hot water heater type elements that most seem to use in kegs don’t seem to vary quite as much. Bottom line is that I would get 2 degree temp fluctuations on the stove top, which is why I went to the camp stove.
This isn’t a great picture but you ge the idea.
Dave's not here!
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- Master of Distillation
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- Novice
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- Location: Ozark Mountians
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- Novice
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Sun Sep 10, 2006 4:08 pm
- Location: Ozark Mountians
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- Bootlegger
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- Joined: Fri Jun 16, 2006 11:35 am
- Location: Middle Managment..Just as i've always dreamed!
wife is a bad house keeper
There are clear hoses for the water jacket, a digital thermometer stuck in the top, and bungee cords to hold the head on and keep it stable. I also use a camp stove as a heat source, works great. Basic stuff, its less messy than this picture make it appear.
There are clear hoses for the water jacket, a digital thermometer stuck in the top, and bungee cords to hold the head on and keep it stable. I also use a camp stove as a heat source, works great. Basic stuff, its less messy than this picture make it appear.
Dave's not here!