I have a 65L digiboil that works great in reflux mode - Details:
- boiler lid has 4" hole
- reduce to 3"
- 3" sightglass packed with copper scrubbers
- 1m tall 3" column packed with stainless spirals
- 3" reflux condenser
- reduce to 2" with thermometer
- 2" sightglass
- 2" 90 elbow
- 2" condenser
Photo In this mode I can run the boiler full out - e.g 3500 watts and the condensers can copy wonderfully, 20 degrees C at output
When trying to run in pot still mode though, I have issues
My output temp is 50+ degrees with the same water flow into the 2" condenser shown below
running at lower power (2k watts) it comes out at 40" with slow output speed
- boiler lid has 4" hole
- reduce to 3"
- 3" sightglass packed with copper scrubbers
- reduce to 2" with thermometer
- 2" sightglass
- 2" connection to pot still (leibig?) condenser
Photo: I know long / slow output is good for pot stills but I know 40 degrees is way hot for the output.
Is there anything I can do with this setup to make it cool better at decent volumes?
- Does my pot still condenser just suck and I need one that cools more efficiently?
- or are there other parts I have already that I could add to the setup to make it cool more
(like adding another condenser before the liebig condenser)
When in pot still mode (trying to make whisky for example), I am assuming from what I've read that I want as little reflux as possible to maximise flavour.
From what I understand, passive reflux occurs with column height, especially when the column gets cool,
and reflux also occurs when it hits stuff (like my scrubbies I assume)
or encounters a volume increase like an onion
so I'm wondering...
In that case do I want as little height as possible?
And how dense should the copper packing be (or should it be left out?)