Fridge
Fridge
Hi All,
I'm looking at converting one of my old fridges into a controlled spot to put my fermenter. I've had a look around but don't know exactly what to do. I know need to put a globe in and wire in a thermostate. Is that it??
cheers
nathaniel
I'm looking at converting one of my old fridges into a controlled spot to put my fermenter. I've had a look around but don't know exactly what to do. I know need to put a globe in and wire in a thermostate. Is that it??
cheers
nathaniel
Hi Warrennwarrenn wrote:awesome..does the heating belt / pad get pluged into the back of it and the sensor go in the wort?
The fridgemate comes in a kit form and requires a little bit of wiring. There were instructions posted on this site. I can find them if you need them.
I just tape the sensor to the outside of the fermenter. As yet I have only used it for cooling, not heating. It works great.
Let me know if you need any further help.
Cheers
Tommy
Agreed, i have one for all the same purposes and to be honest fridge or not i cant remember the last time i heated a brew at all, as many have already said.....warra48 wrote:I have a beer fridge, and it is used for CCing when needed, and fermenting and lagering lagers in summer. Can't, for the life of me, understand why you would want to heat something up in a fridge. Seems to defeat the purpose.
Lagers in winter- Ales in the warmer months!!

Cheers
Leigh
Leigh
Actually, IMHO, that is probably good advice for the majority of brewers, but it may be dependent on where you live. In my case, ales April to September/October, wheats for a couple of months ready for summer, then lagers in the fridge during summer.lethaldog wrote:Lagers in winter- Ales in the warmer months!!





The 20 watt light globe thing will work fine for heating. Just make sure it's not a compact fluorescent, as those pump out too much UV. Note that the fridgemate has both a cooling and a heating mode, so you can use it for temperature control in either scenario.
One other thing though I found using the light globe was that the top of the fridge would get a lot hotter than the bottom. If I was going to dabble with heating again, I'd definitely think about rigging up some kind of computer fan to circulate the air, much like this:
http://www.aussiehomebrewer.com/forum/i ... opic=18349
One other thing though I found using the light globe was that the top of the fridge would get a lot hotter than the bottom. If I was going to dabble with heating again, I'd definitely think about rigging up some kind of computer fan to circulate the air, much like this:
http://www.aussiehomebrewer.com/forum/i ... opic=18349
w00t!