Kareltje wrote: ↑Wed Jan 08, 2020 3:22 pm
Judging by the pictures SaltyStaves gave us, his device can not be a thumper, as it will hardly contain any fluid to make it thump: the fluid will flow back into the column. But the point of entrance is low, so a thumper could be used to do the same.
It will function like a cross between the two doing neither job well. However as he said "What I collect from the drain valve is thick, cloudy fusel-heavy liquid of a low abv." There just won't be a lot of it because when it reaches the height of the feed tube you're both starting to mix it back with the vapor and likely allowing it to drain back to the boiler.
The point of both a slobberbox and a clarifier is the drain valve at the bottom, to keep it empty. (If they are large enough, they can contain all the muke of a run and don't need a drain valve.) The point of a thumper is the bubbling of vapour through a liquid, thus taking up alcohol and/or taste.
A slobberbox is used to catch low boiling pukes and either remove them or redirect them to the boiler.
While many people use the slobberbox to catch puke it does catch the fusel-heavy liquids as well.
A clarifier prevents low boiling or less volatile compounds to re-enter the boiler. When they flow back into the boiler, they will be revaporated and so again polute the vapour. Besides: as the volume in the boiler diminishes during the run, the concentration of the unwanted compounds will grow and as the temperature in the boiler will rise, they will be more easily be evaporated. So taking them out of the system is benificial.
I'm not sure where you're going with the last part as no one at the home level would feed this gunk back to the boiler (if that's what you meant, not sure). Either way they won't make it back to the boiler as these fusels are already past the point of no return in the vapor path.
Clarifiers work, are good, but need to be built to be taken apart and cleaned (important in my book). They should also be modular as sometimes you WANT the fusels and don't want them removed (depends what you are making).
They are getting very popular in both Poland and Russia on dedicated stills for making vodka & other neutrals.
Programmer specializing in process control for ExxonMobil (ethanol refinery control), WT, Omron, Bosch, Honeywell & Boeing.
More than a decade working for NASA & FAA Tech with computer code used on Space Shuttles and some airline flight recorders.