Feedback on my design?
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Feedback on my design?
Before I fully assemble everything, I want to bounce some design questions off y'all.
The still I'm currently working is a relatively small 16quart piece that uses a stock pot as a boiler. Off the top of this I'm planning on running a 18"x1" column, with a elbow at the top leading to 2' lyne arm and then descending into a 20'X3/8" condensing coil.
My thoughts on this particular design are that I can attach a bucket style tea-strainer to the base of the tower as a container to hold botanicals. The height of the column and length of the arm are to allow me to accomplish smoother tasting runs and avoid a certain harsh flavor profile.
Barring the small boiler size (I'll upgrade at a later date), does anyone see any inherent design flaws in this plan?
The still I'm currently working is a relatively small 16quart piece that uses a stock pot as a boiler. Off the top of this I'm planning on running a 18"x1" column, with a elbow at the top leading to 2' lyne arm and then descending into a 20'X3/8" condensing coil.
My thoughts on this particular design are that I can attach a bucket style tea-strainer to the base of the tower as a container to hold botanicals. The height of the column and length of the arm are to allow me to accomplish smoother tasting runs and avoid a certain harsh flavor profile.
Barring the small boiler size (I'll upgrade at a later date), does anyone see any inherent design flaws in this plan?
Re: Feedback on my design?
Column size doesn't do jack in a pot still. If you want a higher purity, you angle your lyne arm upward, downward for less purity. The speed at which you run it will largely determine the flavor component, fast and hot runs will be very flavorful (for better or worse), and slow runs will be lighter and less flavorful for the most part.juniperlover wrote:The height of the column and length of the arm are to allow me to accomplish smoother tasting runs and avoid a certain harsh flavor profile.
I like your idea about the basket though, let us know how it works for you.
Experience is what you get right after you need it.
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Re: Feedback on my design?
Thanks for the feedback! Also, I was perusing the faq and came across this
Any advice on how to incorporate this?Second: ALL stills must be open to the atmosphere. They should NOT be closed. A closed still will build up pressure, and can blow up. An open still, will have part of the still (after the condenser) fully open to the atmosphere. You must design your still, so that there is no pressure buildup, EVER.
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- Distiller
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Re: Feedback on my design?
You don't plan on adding a valve do you? What you described will be open to the atmosphere if there is no way to close it.
"yeah? yeah? the maple flavored kind?" A dog on you tube.
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Re: Feedback on my design?
Nope, wasn't planning on a valve. So I don't need to incorporate any sort of pressure release (ala pressure cooker style) into the lid of the stock pot?
Re: Feedback on my design?
Nope. As long as one end of your still is open to the atmosphere you're finejuniperlover wrote:Nope, wasn't planning on a valve. So I don't need to incorporate any sort of pressure release (ala pressure cooker style) into the lid of the stock pot?
Experience is what you get right after you need it.
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- Distiller
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Re: Feedback on my design?
Just make sure all of this is a downward spiral to prevent pooling. You may need to incorporate spacers on your worm.juniperlover wrote:descending into a 20'X3/8" condensing coil.
"yeah? yeah? the maple flavored kind?" A dog on you tube.
- Odin
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Re: Feedback on my design?
Apart from that distilling with herbs & berries in the boiler, you get a more complex flavour profile? Just one. A sorta tea bag is going to be way too small. Maybe a hops cooking bag, if you want to vapour infuse? Hang it just under your column and you will be fine.
Odin.
Odin.
"Great art is created only through diligent and painstaking effort to perfect and polish oneself." by Buddhist filosofer Daisaku Ikeda.
Re: Feedback on my design?
Using Odin's method you could get a 3" stainless tea holder if it fits in your opening. I use the following.Odin wrote:Apart from that distilling with herbs & berries in the boiler, you get a more complex flavour profile? Just one. A sorta tea bag is going to be way too small. Maybe a hops cooking bag, if you want to vapour infuse? Hang it just under your column and you will be fine.
Odin.
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Re: Feedback on my design?
Solid, thanks! Something like that mesh ball is actually exactly what I had in mind