Fisher kel Tath wrote:Bumping this up cause I've seemingly found myself in an argument with someone on another forum, saying that taping the temp probe to the fermentor and insulating is only going to guarantee frozen liquid.
Bugeater wrote:Fisher kel Tath wrote:Bumping this up cause I've seemingly found myself in an argument with someone on another forum, saying that taping the temp probe to the fermentor and insulating is only going to guarantee frozen liquid.
That's a bunch of BS. The last 40-50 batches of mine should have all been frozen is that were true. Taping the probe to the fermenter and insulating tells the controller the exact (or close enough) temperature of the wort. When the temperature drops to the set point of the controller, the controller shuts off the freezer. No way will the temperature continue to drop to freezing unless there is an equipment malfunction or you did something stupid.
While the freezer is actually running trying to get the temperature of the wort down to the set temperature, the ambient temperature inside the freezer can be quite a bit lower than the set temperature. We don't care about that, only the temperature of the wort. Some of the other forums have folks giving advice who have been getting their heads and rectal thermometers mixed up.
Wayne



cdburg wrote:I'm definitely not trying to stir up shit here, but I did want to post an example of what I was talking above with my experience with a glass carboy in a freezer for fermentation.
The picture below (not great, but hopefully visible) shows the difference in temperature between a probe taped to the outside of the glass carboy (insulated with silver, reflective bubble wrap) and a probe in a thermowell in the middle of the fermenting beer.
In this case, I was fermenting a Kolsch at 60F. The "Cool" Ranco controller is the probe in the thermowell (running the freezer). The "Heat" Ranco controller is the probe that was attached to the outside of the carboy (for comparison).
In this case, the freezer was running, to knock the temperature back down to 60F from 61F. In the process of cooling the beer, the first thing to cool is the glass carboy, like a bottle of beer in the fridge. In this picture, there is a 5 degree difference between the two probes.
When the freezer isn't running, the two temperatures are usually very close or the same. When the freezer kicks on though, the "outside" probe reaches the desired temp (60F in this case) about 20 minutes before he internal probe. If I used that to control the ferment, it wouldn't be quite as accurate. The liquid wouldn't be cooled to the desired temp, and could get quite warm over time. I actually had problems with fusels in the past before I moved to the thermowell.
As always, your experience my vary, but I've found the thermowell to be more accurate and to produce better beers, in my set up. If you use a refridgerator to control temps (as Jamil does), I don't think it would be as much of an issue since the liquid would be cooled slower. If you ferment in buckets or plastic carboys, I also don't think it would be an issue, since plastic is a better insulator. For glass carboys fermenting in freezers though, I would encourage everyone to test for themselves. You might see something similar to what I have experienced.
Corporal, BN Army Kettle Scrubbing Squad 
andy77 wrote:
You're not stirring things up, good data point.
This would be my question: if you're controlling the temp via a probe taped to the side, what's the actual temp swing of the wort. If the measured temp swings from (in you example) from 61, back down to 60 very quickly because you're measuring the glass temp, then everything equalizes, then the fridge turns back on again and cools back down again very quickly, the wose case scenario is overcycling the fridge. But if the actual wort temp, over the long term stays at 60-61 then that's a good ferment.
Remember that the goal isn't to measure the fermentation temps exactly, but to maintain a desired temp through a whole fermentation.
At any rate, I tape to the side of the carboy, and have great fermentations.

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