Little bit of headway so far - I now have a condenser.
This design for the jig, while it looked pretty, self-destructed pretty quickly. First the picture hangers snapped off, then when I started forcing the issue with the whole setup, the 19mm dowel twisted to destruction. It wasn't a total waste because I still had the base:
The next attempt was the 'no more Mr Nice Guy' design. I sacrificed my (cheapo) jack handle which was pretty solid, found a length of stainless as the end holder, and welded on a crap doubled-up socket for the ratchet to attach to:
I filled the 3/8 copper with cooking salt (the only stuff I saw cheap in bulk) and used an old sacrificial phone USB cable as the spacer. I bought a crapload of salt but was surprised that it only used the top bit of the 2kg bag. Filling the whole 6m length was a bit tricky to do on my own - I'd recommend having a friend who can help hold the length up while you tap it. In the end I managed on my own though.
For the space between the two layers of coils I used a cardboard roll. It was difficult to remove, I soaked it overnight, then started picking it out. Then I hit it with the gurney. Then I grabbed a flat screwdriver and prized the coils apart slightly before blasting the stuck cardboard with the gurney. Bit by bit it all came out.
Removing the salt was harder than it should have been. I used a gurney, and once again, having a friend on hand would make things far easier. I had to try and hold the job down whilst jamming the end of the gurney into one of the intakes, while simultaneously shielding the spray from my eyes so I could see what the hell was going on. In the end, after much gurneying and once a drip started to appear from the outlet I fitted it up to a garden hose, and about 20 minutes later it blasted through into a strong flow:
It turned out reasonably straight, though slightly smaller than planned due to slight flattening. This would be difficult to factor in unless you're into making a lot of coils and can measure the flattening fairly consistently. I think I ended up with ~4-5mm gap on the column sides so we'll see how she goes. The coil itself ended up around 8 1/2" long. I went over the original plan slightly "just in case". The end cap was difficult for me to source, so as a last resort I grabbed the verniers and walked around the local shopping centre looking very suspicious measuring everything that was made out of stainless. In the end, I found a 'wool holder' that is actually a press fit for the 2 1/2 inch column. A very solid press fit at that - if I ever decide to remove the end cap when I fit it, it'll probably be a heat job. But in all honesty If I ever felt the need for a change I'd probably sell the whole thing and start again rather than trying to retain coils or anything.
Anyway, there's lots more to come. I have the 2.5" column fitting into the 3" (I'll use a flour/water seal here). I have the old autoclave prepared - the inner pipe is removed, the resulting hole is plugged, and I have a 3" hole ready at the other end. Next I'll weld in a stopper for the copper mesh at the base and in the 2.5" column at the top of the packing space. Then I'll make a basic frame where I can place my poached BBQ wok burner that I never use, then we'll see what next from there. There's still the liebig, coil line connections, plate insertion (nervous about welding this bit - don't want to blow internal holes in the plates, nor blob weld internally), and cleaning of all the parts used to get rid of solids that have accumulated. The pipe was from salvage, so who knows what was running through it, but I'll probably gurney it out before putting the whole unit through a cleaning run.
So far everything is 'a bit rough', but I just don't have the equipment nor availability of supplies to make a schimko job that looks like it was bought from a shop. Hopefully it'll perform though.
For reference, the 8 1/2 inch 3/8 coil wrapped around a 19mm centre with a 1mm thick cardboard spacer ended up at about 52mm OD. I didn't use a bending spring for the salt-filled pipe. All-up I ended up with about 2 1/2 - 3m of 3/8 pipe left over. Hopefully this reference might be of some use for the planning process for others.