Racking / Priming

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Racking / Priming

Post by Guest »

G'day everybody,

I have been following this forum for a short time and would agree with other new members that it a great resource and a good read.

I have just started brewing again after a break of 20 years! Just started brew No. 5 and am encouraged to rack and bulk prime after reading some of your comments. This one is a Morgans saaz pilsener/ Pilsener Urquel clone, Saflager yeast, extra hops currently in the shed at 14-15deg, should rack on the weekend.

Hope not to cover to much old ground so if I do just point me in the right direction.

When I get to the bulk priming stage and assuming I have lost anything from 1 to 4 litres from racking and testing should I be calculating the priming sugar amount or will the recomended 180 - 200g do? Am I worrying to much.

Comments appreciated
Hully
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Racking / Priming

Post by Hully »

G'day again

Forgot username above :oops:
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
db
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Post by db »

Hully i calulate my priming sugar at 7-8g per litre before transfering to the bulk primer
Dogger Dan
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Post by Dogger Dan »

db,

you are priming lite for 23 litres

I am thinking its about 14 g for a good pilsner or North American style Beer

British are about 12,

Stouts/Porters 9

But I like mine fizzy

:lol: :wink:

Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
db
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Post by db »

yeah 22-23 in the primary.. so around 20-21 after racking. so approx 160-170g.
I used to prime at 10g a litre (tried 12g once - it got messy) but i found that the longer i kept the beers the fizzier they got.. after a month they were stupidly over carbed. but i suspect this had something to do with the temps my beers are stored at (18-20deg on average.. & higher in summer.. i would keep em colder if possible, but i cant)
what temps do you store yours at DD? i presume colder than mine?
Hully
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Location: Newcastle, NSW

Racking / Priming

Post by Hully »

Thanks guys

My first couple of brews have been a bit flatter than I prefer.

Hopefully this will fix that
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
Hully
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Location: Newcastle, NSW

Post by Hully »

Just racked my first brew, used 2m of hose coiled into bottom of secondary. All started well but flow stopped about half ay through. Thought tap was blocked so removed and checked but was OK. After a bit of fiddling got some flow by pulling some hose out of the secondary. Has anyone else had similar problems? Think I will cut hose a bit shorter for the next one.
As this is a lager looking to leave in secondary for 2 weeks, temp currently at 16C, should I try and get back to 13C for thtat time :?:
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
db
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Post by db »

hully.. hose length shouldn't be an issue. try moving the primary fermentor to a higher position.. & dont use a sediment reducer
Evo
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Post by Evo »

Yeah, the further the hose is under water (or beer in our case) the more pressure it requires to flow through. To get around this I normally just gradually move my second fermenter away from the primary keeping the hose JUST under the water (beer) level.
Evo - Part Man, Part Ale
flosso
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Post by flosso »

Evo wrote:Yeah, the further the hose is under water (or beer in our case) the more pressure it requires to flow through. To get around this I normally just gradually move my second fermenter away from the primary keeping the hose JUST under the water (beer) level.
On top of this - the more beer that is in the primary, the more pressure there will be forcing beer through the hose - so it is a catch 22 in that you need more pressure the further the hose is underneath beer, but you are getting less pressure because there isn't as much beer in the primary.

I just make sure that the primary is a fair bit higher than the secondary and haven't had a problem yet.
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gregb
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Post by gregb »

Primary on kitchen bench, racking bin on kitchen floor.
Never had a problem.

Greg.
db
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Post by db »

Evo wrote:Yeah, the further the hose is under water (or beer in our case) the more pressure it requires to flow through. To get around this I normally just gradually move my second fermenter away from the primary keeping the hose JUST under the water (beer) level.
well when you put it like that it makes sense :D length does matter :lol: :wink:

yeah i have my primary at bench height & i've never had issues
Friar
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Post by Friar »

Go with gregb's suggestion

Gravity sucks

let it do the work

F
I'm not as think as you drunk I am
Hully
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Location: Newcastle, NSW

Post by Hully »

Thanks guys

Thought it would be like a siphon. I had primary on bench, secondary on floor.

Guess it's like db said, length does matter. Obviously mines too long so I will just have to cut mine in half :shock: :wink:
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
Dogger Dan
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Post by Dogger Dan »

No,

and it sounds like I am one of the few that syphons 8) :wink:

Dogger
"Listening to someone who brews their own beer is like listening to a religous fanatic talk about the day he saw the light" Ross Murray, Montreal Gazette
Tony
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Post by Tony »

Hully wrote:Guess it's like db said, length does matter. Obviously mines too long so I will just have to cut mine in half :shock: :wink:
Don't take too much off - you still want enough to coil in the bottom so that your bulk-priming solution is well mixed.

With the bit you do cut off, use it to extend your bottling tube - it makes filling bottles stupidly easy, because all you do is move the bottler on the end of the tube, rather than lifting bottles up to the tap all the time.

Tony
peterd
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Post by peterd »

Been away - missed this thread up 'til now.
Length has very minor effect (only matter of "drag" as liquid passes walls of tube - longer tube, more drag).
Major issues are relative head heights, "lift" distance (how high the liquid has to be "lifted" before is flows downhill), and tube diameter (assuming it is both fairly standard, and constant (i.e. doesn't vary over its length), we can ignore this one).
Conventional wisdom has it that distance tube under surface has no effect. If I remember correctly, Physics books agree. :-)
peterd

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(with apologies to Satchel Paige)
Hully
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Post by Hully »

just an update on this, my first lager.

Racked after 10 days SG1015, in secondary for 13 days.

Bulk primed 180g sugar in 500ml water, boiled. Finished with 19l

Bottled into a mix of longnecks, stubbies and a few 1.25l coke bottles in that order. Did not stir. Left for 4 days at room temp then have been in the fridge for 4 weeks, out today.

Having a few PET bottles in a batch is handy as you can give them a squeeze to get an idea of how carbonation is progressing.

Because the batch only had 4 days to ferment before going into the fridge the PET bottles are still about the same hardness as when they went in. I am hoping there is still some active yeast left to finish. As noted in other posts I may have uneven sugar mixing because I did not stir and these were the last filled.

I have just bottled my 2nd lager, and am planning to "lager" in the fridge as per the first batch.

Sould I leave it a bit longer to carbonate before lagering or go as per the first and let carbonate after.

Any comments or suggestions would be appreciated
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
Oliver
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Post by Oliver »

I'd leave to carbonate for a couple of days, then lager.

But I don't think there's any reason you couldn't lager first, then allow secondary carbonation when you remove it from the lager cellar (or fridge :D )

Oliver
Hully
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Post by Hully »

Thanks Oliver

The waiting is the hardest part of this lager thing. Cant wait to try one :D
You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and a airline, but at the very least you need a beer. - Frank Zappa
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