I’ve let my rig air dry and haven’t had a problem yet. We have dry air here though.
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I’ve let my rig air dry and haven’t had a problem yet. We have dry air here though.
I've never cleaned it except for vinegar runs and removing verdigris. I've heard arguments to the effect that they should not be cleaned under normal circumstances.
For sure Bee I hear ya.
Copper is everywhere I get that, but where do you think the sulfur is coming from? In my humble...isn't it more likely to be ammonia? We do use it a lot (DAP) for example.
From what I understand, the sulfur is present in nearly all the ingredients, grain, yeast and water. From the crumbs I've gathered from various "blue booger" threads, water quality & plumbing articles, and articles on other brewing disciplines, the cookie looks to me to be a combination of unhealthy fermentation and pH being a factor in whether or not the corroding compounds are locked up in compounds that don't boil off with the alcohol. IOW, your ingredients will always have sulfur in them and your mash recipe has to keep them locked up.kiwi Bruce wrote: ↑Tue Dec 27, 2022 5:25 pmCopper is everywhere I get that, but where do you think the sulfur is coming from? In my humble...isn't it more likely to be ammonia? We do use it a lot (DAP) for example.
Kiwi
And yet your problem may not be with the pH at all. Several others have already suggested that the remedy to your problem might lay in having a clean top end; a clean riser and condenser.
Could be copper acetate...it's blue in suspension and could be from heating vinegar and copper...either way, it too is toxic (LD 50).contrahead wrote: ↑Mon Dec 26, 2022 11:08 am Copper sulfate is produced by the reaction between copper and sulfuric acid. If your washes are turning out blue and you are assuming that this tint was caused by copper sulfate then only a couple of plausible explanations come to mind. Since the presence of sulfur is required to create copper sulfate to begin with; how did it get there?
Either you created the copper sulfate yourself by using sulfuric acid instead of acetic acid (vinegar) when you first cleaned out your still, or your high pH water in the wash is slowly cleaning and releasing this pigment from the inside surfaces of your copper. Copper corrosion by contact with air is inevitable and unavoidable (gold is about the only metal that does not corrode). Ever hear of acid rain? And sulfur dioxide can be carried by dry air.
My suggestion is to forget about it. The problem should wash away soon. A tablespoon or two of bicarbonate of soda is useful for removing buildup from the inside of a copper boiler (but your boiler may not be of copper).
As “StillerBoy” said: pH is a manageable task. It should be simple and easy to amend your water by adding either citric, malic, tartaric, tannic, fumaric, lactic, phosphoric or acetic acids. You should be on top of your pH management game anyway, to achieve proper fermentation with yeast. Get yourself some pH test strips (if you don't have any) but stay away from cheap electronic pH testers.
Oh; cupric oxide (a source of copper) in trace amounts is usually found in quality multivitamin and eye care tablets.