Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
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- Bootlegger
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Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Hi guys,
I'm slowly finishing off my 3" Boka still. It'll have a 200mm double wound condenser using 3/8" tubing and the total length of the column including condenser is 2m.
I have a 50L S/S keg with the spear taken out & a 2200W S/S heating element.
So the question is, what flow rate does the water pump need to be? The pumps I find at my local hardware store don't look like they can be adjusted.
I can get a 350W commercial pump for $79 = 3000L/hr or 750W commercial pump for $79 = 12,500L/hr
or
250W private pump for $49 = 8000L/hr or 550W private pump for $79 = 15,500L/hr.
this is the link to Bunnings which shows the different water pumps they sell - http://www.bunnings.com.au/search-produ ... nce&page=1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
or I could go with a http://www.westbrew.com.au/showProduct/ ... ent/700015 for $49 which looks like a pond/aquarium pump :/
any help is much appreciated.
Edit: the guy at brewcraft doesn't have any specs on the pump he sells & they aren't adjustable either. Think I will cut that pump out of the equation.
I was thinking going with one of those commercial pumps cause if it has to run for hours it'll have a longer life. The price are the same for a 350W & 750W, should I just go with the 750W or could too much flow rate cause problems?
I'm slowly finishing off my 3" Boka still. It'll have a 200mm double wound condenser using 3/8" tubing and the total length of the column including condenser is 2m.
I have a 50L S/S keg with the spear taken out & a 2200W S/S heating element.
So the question is, what flow rate does the water pump need to be? The pumps I find at my local hardware store don't look like they can be adjusted.
I can get a 350W commercial pump for $79 = 3000L/hr or 750W commercial pump for $79 = 12,500L/hr
or
250W private pump for $49 = 8000L/hr or 550W private pump for $79 = 15,500L/hr.
this is the link to Bunnings which shows the different water pumps they sell - http://www.bunnings.com.au/search-produ ... nce&page=1" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
or I could go with a http://www.westbrew.com.au/showProduct/ ... ent/700015 for $49 which looks like a pond/aquarium pump :/
any help is much appreciated.
Edit: the guy at brewcraft doesn't have any specs on the pump he sells & they aren't adjustable either. Think I will cut that pump out of the equation.
I was thinking going with one of those commercial pumps cause if it has to run for hours it'll have a longer life. The price are the same for a 350W & 750W, should I just go with the 750W or could too much flow rate cause problems?
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- Distiller
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
I don't have a boka. I run a cm 3" PSII. But from my experience, pump height ability is probably what you should be looking at, not so much the volume.
A pump might be able to push alot of water volume at level or down hill, but if it doesn't have the (torque?) to push it up to the top of your column, it won't do you any good.
I would also suggest getting one that is rated a at least couple feet higher than your column because they do seem to get a little weaker over time...
A pump might be able to push alot of water volume at level or down hill, but if it doesn't have the (torque?) to push it up to the top of your column, it won't do you any good.
I would also suggest getting one that is rated a at least couple feet higher than your column because they do seem to get a little weaker over time...
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
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- Bootlegger
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- Location: Oz
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Thanks mate. I've found the website that supplies the pumps to Bunnings - http://www.commercialelectric.com.au/water_pumps.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow & checking out the manualswacabi1 wrote:I don't have a boka. I run a cm 3" PSII. But from my experience, pump height ability is probably what you should be looking at, not so much the volume.
A pump might be able to push alot of water volume at level or down hill, but if it doesn't have the (torque?) to push it up to the top of your column, it won't do you any good.
I would also suggest getting one that is rated a at least couple feet higher than your column because they do seem to get a little weaker over time...
350W (commercial) @ 2.5-3m pushes out 2,500L/hr (41L/min)
550W (private) doesn't specify at different heights (think ill def go with a commercial pump then lol)
750W (commercial) @ 2.5m pushes out ~10,000L/hr (166L/min)
Would there be too much pressure through the 3/8" copper condenser? or at the pump end and damage either? using the 750W? What kind of rate of flow and I aiming for?
They are both priced the same - $79. This makes me want to get 750W.
This is the page for the 750W pump - http://www.commercialelectric.com.au/Su ... _750W.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
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- Bootlegger
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
you can push a lot of water through 3/8 tube with not much back pressure
a 250 mm single coil of 3/8 knocks that 2200 with ease that i was using for a while
i also have a double 3/8 in a 3" and it has no problems
get a pump that will push to say 4 or 5m head height as flow rates drop as head increases normally
my pond pump is happier on the 3/8th than on 1/4...
a 250 mm single coil of 3/8 knocks that 2200 with ease that i was using for a while
i also have a double 3/8 in a 3" and it has no problems
get a pump that will push to say 4 or 5m head height as flow rates drop as head increases normally
my pond pump is happier on the 3/8th than on 1/4...
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
some use 12V boat bilge pumps and say they work well but then you need a 12v suplly..
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- Bootlegger
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
so are you recommending to go with the 750W pump? 6800-8000L/hr @ 4-5m head height (113L - 133L per minute) is ok to run?maheel wrote:you can push a lot of water through 3/8 tube with not much back pressure
a 250 mm single coil of 3/8 knocks that 2200 with ease that i was using for a while
i also have a double 3/8 in a 3" and it has no problems
get a pump that will push to say 4 or 5m head height as flow rates drop as head increases normally
my pond pump is happier on the 3/8th than on 1/4...
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
no i am not recommending anything...
i was running a 2" bok the other day with about 2L a min... at +-120L a min your going to have way to much pressure i think and will need to divert some but still ensure you get the flow you need
build it 1st and do some test runs on the garden tap to figure out what sort of flow rates you need
a small pond pump that lifts to 4M may be all you need rather than to much pressure causing you drama
i was running a 2" bok the other day with about 2L a min... at +-120L a min your going to have way to much pressure i think and will need to divert some but still ensure you get the flow you need
build it 1st and do some test runs on the garden tap to figure out what sort of flow rates you need
a small pond pump that lifts to 4M may be all you need rather than to much pressure causing you drama
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Mine is a dirty water pump which means I don't need to change the water so often and I don't need to worry about leaves and stuff in the tank.
I use controllers to manage the voltage of the elements, so I made a third one to control the speed of the pump.
I use a ball tap Y piece with a return to the tank to bleed off some of the water pressure. I bought it at a garage sale ex-hydroponics set up but its one of these:
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Submersible- ... 2c63609002" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
Specs say 10m head, recon that is about right.
I use controllers to manage the voltage of the elements, so I made a third one to control the speed of the pump.
I use a ball tap Y piece with a return to the tank to bleed off some of the water pressure. I bought it at a garage sale ex-hydroponics set up but its one of these:
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Submersible- ... 2c63609002" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" rel="nofollow
Specs say 10m head, recon that is about right.
3"pot, 3"LM/VM, modular hybrid bubbler.
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- Distiller
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Not sure what kind of hardware stores you have in OZ, but here we have big box stores that cater to the home "do it yourselfer". One project people like to do around their homes is building small ponds with waterfalls. The pond acts as a reservoir for the pump that pushes the water up to the top of the waterfall, it then gravity feeds back down... (I've heard that water goes backwards below the equator, does it flow uphill down there? ) these pumps are rated by their pump height ability as well as flow rate...these work very good since they are made to run for long durations and pump to atleast rated heights...
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Yeah so the head height is the important consideration consideration right?these work very good since they are made to run for long durations and pump to atleast rated heights...
Almost any decent pump will need a bleed when it is hooked up to a 6mm cold finger (dimroth) condenser.
3"pot, 3"LM/VM, modular hybrid bubbler.
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- Distiller
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
It seems all the pumps you are talking are all centrifugal style. You generaly cant hurt this style of pump by resticting the flow. They are a non positve displacement pump. This means you can throttle it back with a simple valve.'SideWinder' wrote:Would there be too much pressure through the 3/8" copper condenser? or at the pump end and damage either? using the 750W? What kind of rate of flow and I aiming for?
A positive displacement pump can be damaged by restiction.
If it has an impellor (propeller kind of thingy inside) its centrifugal. Disadvantage with them is their performance drops off real quick once you start trying to lift with them.
Get the biggest centrifugal one you can within reason and throttle it back. A 3"bok is going to need a good bit of cooling. No need to go above a 1" outlet on the pump.
You design it, I make it. Copper and Stainless. Down under. PM me.
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- Bootlegger
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Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Sweet. This is what I was hoping for!emptyglass wrote:It seems all the pumps you are talking are all centrifugal style. You generaly cant hurt this style of pump by resticting the flow. They are a non positve displacement pump. This means you can throttle it back with a simple valve.'SideWinder' wrote:Would there be too much pressure through the 3/8" copper condenser? or at the pump end and damage either? using the 750W? What kind of rate of flow and I aiming for?
A positive displacement pump can be damaged by restiction.
If it has an impellor (propeller kind of thingy inside) its centrifugal. Disadvantage with them is their performance drops off real quick once you start trying to lift with them.
Get the biggest centrifugal one you can within reason and throttle it back. A 3"bok is going to need a good bit of cooling. No need to go above a 1" outlet on the pump.
I'll get the 750W pump because it costs same as the 350W pump. If I can just restrict the flow & it's fine, it's the better option.
Re: Water Pump for a 3" Boka Still
Bunnings sell a Y piece that has a ball valve in each outlet. Run a return to the tank from the other and use the valves to adjust flow. This avoids restricting pressure from the pump.If I can just restrict the flow & it's fine, it's the better option.
3"pot, 3"LM/VM, modular hybrid bubbler.