Post #1252 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:When I was saying efficiency I was reffering to the eob efficiency. Am I correct this is the main one people refer to? I'm not sure why the efficiency changes into the kettle. Is that just because you leave some trub and wort behind?

When I brewed my centennial IPA I did a normal mash and measured the gravity and saw that it was once again to low. I withheld a gallon that I normally would have just added after removing the bag. Since I saw that my pre boil efficiency was low I then poured some of the gallon through the bag until I hit the correct number. I ended up being 1 point to high, but that was better than being to low.
Hey Fred, Good on you for measuring your actual volumes at VIK and EOBV and the corresponding gravity readings, GIK and EOBG. Your efficiencies in Section P are 70.1% and 70.6% are very close together. You did a very good job! Your efficiencies DO NOT change in the kettle between these two points, Fred. On this brew, there was no additional sugars added after the boil started, so all was going on was evaporation. You could take a volume and gravity set anytime between these two points and come up with the same efficiency.

The EIF will be different, because you have taken the time to measure your trub and did not include it in the fermenter, so the BIABacus calculated that efficiency as 61.1%. Well, even if someone doesn't measure the trub and includes the whole lot in the fermenter, there is still a different efficiency because trub doesn't turn into beer. :lol:
Last edited by Mad_Scientist on 23 Apr 2013, 03:54, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1253 made 12 years ago
Grumble, grumble, grumble :P.

Fred, I am grumbling because I can't believe how hard it is to explain and write something good on efficiency. If you had started out here on BIABrewer.info, I could explain everything fairly quickly I think. But, very few people have.

For example, in your prior posts you have twice referred to an, 'efficiency calculator.' Can you please give me a link to this efficiency calculator?

...

I think I mentioned before Fred that the BIABacus already has an efficiency calculator in it so I need to know the reasoning why you aren't looking at Section P of your BIABacus?

And, it looks like in some bits of your BIABacus you have just copied estimated figures into the actuals because they match exactly. Don't do that!!!

...

Anyway, pretty cross with myself as I have just spent quite a few hours, yet again, trying to explain "efficiency" in yet another way and feel as though I have not succeeded but I really have run out of time yet again.

Here's my latest attempt at trying to explain it but it needs many more hours of work before it will all read nicely :evil:.
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Post #1254 made 12 years ago
PistolPatch,

Hey dude. I used a seperate efficiency calculator for my first biab (Chinook). This was because I used beersmith for that one and I didn't know the different kinds of efficiency. I have since realized there is a built in calculator in the biabacus. For my last brew (Centennial)I used a temperature adjustment calculator because I was pulling a sample right after I pulled the bag and the wort was at 150 degrees. When I pulled the sample and adjusted for temp I realized once again my GIK was to low. On my last couple brews I have been witholding a gallon so I could mash more grain. Is that ok? I've read that too much dilution after the boil can be a problem, but before the boil is ok. Anyways I sparged with some of that gallon until I got close to my GIK. I definitely measured everything very thoroughly in my Centennial and I measured EOBV with my dipstick. My Centennial and Citra look very similar because they are. You said my Citra recipe looked good so I just used a different amount and color of crystal because I wanted some sweetness and a different hop. I read your efficiency write up very thoroughly. I want to brew another similar IPA with just a different hop. I have been intentionally making my hop additions round numbers because I dont have a scale yet. so thats why the numbers look nice and neat. One day I will make you proud Pistolpatch. :)

Metalhophead

Post #1255 made 12 years ago
[Before wading through the below Fred, maybe read the section towards the end titled, "BTW, my bad on the following :argh:..." as I buggered up something in my last post here.]
metalhophead wrote:...One day I will make you proud...
:lol: :lol: :lol:

Sorry Fred, I got side-tracked, and a bit drunk, last night trying to write up that pdf above. I've been using Microsoft Publisher for years so am unfortunately sort of conditioned to using it for that type of stuff but in the 2013 version the bastards have moved every single command to a different place so that one single page took hours. Might be time I ditched Publisher :smoke:.

Anyway, to your posts/s...
metalhophead wrote:When I just said "efficiency" I was being too vague which you say multiple times in numerous posts. When I was saying efficiency I was referring to the eob efficiency. Am I correct this is the main one people refer to?
It should be but unfortunatley Fred it is not. Some brewers when they say "efficiency" mean in the kettle (the pdf above hopefully explains why any efficiency measured in the kettle remains constant) while others mean in the fermentor. Most brewers who post on forums assume that everyone else means the same efficiency that they do but unfortunately this is not true.

It would take several pages on why this is so (and I have written it before on the forum somewhere) but, trust me when I say it is very important that you be precise about what efficiency you are referring to. This post here has easy, unambiguous terms. For example, you say above you were measuring end of boil efficiency - that is exactly what you should write. On this forum, in this thread for sure, you can just write EOBE.
metalhophead wrote:I'm not sure why the efficiency changes into the kettle. Is that just because you leave some trub and wort behind?
I'm thinking here Fred that you mean, "I'm not sure why the efficiency changes into the fermentor?" If so, your answer above is correct. What you (and Richard) say is the essence of the pdf I wrote, just shorter :peace:.

Moving onto the Actuals..

In post #1249 you talked about running some of the gallon held back from the mash through the grain. That's great as long as the process didn't cause you too many labour problems. On your size brews, sparging isn't too much of a hassle so I think that was a good decision. And, being within one gravity point? Well, you can't ask for more than that ;).

In post # 1254 immediately above you mention about taking gravity readings at 150 F (66 C)and temperature correcting them. I strongly advise against that. Try and cool them to at least 86 F (30 C) and then still temp correct them. Gravity readings are imprecise enough as it is without introducing yet another margin of error. (We need to do a bit more research on how ell those temp correction formulas hold up and, hold on!!!! Make sure you aren't using a hydrometer at those tempos as they can crack on you.)
metalhophead wrote:On my last couple brews I have been withholding a gallon so I could mash more grain. Is that ok?
Yep, except there is a bit of a Catch 22 here as the less water that touches your grain means you get lower EIK which means you need more grain :P. The BIABacus is the perfect (and only tool) around where you can see this effect at work easily, just look at how the total weight of grain required in Section C changes as you increase your dilutions in Section W. The good news is that in your case, as your batch sizes are not huge, you can avoid the catch 22 by sparging the water you withhold just as you did on that last brew. If you do this, you should move that gallon to the 'Water Used in a Sparge' field of Section W.
metalhophead wrote:I've read that too much dilution after the boil can be a problem, but before the boil is ok.
That is correct :peace:. In fact, dilution before the boil is said to improve quality. The reason why it is not done regularly though is because it costs more in grain. Less water touches the grain so you need more of it to get the same gravity wort going into the boil.

Dilutions during the boil are sort of a no man's land on quality. Dilutions after the boil would decrease quality but if kept within reasonable bounds, very few brewers would be able to detect a difference on most styles so no need to call the police or anything ;).

BTW, my bad on the following :argh:...

In my last post here I said, "...it looks like in some bits of your BIABacus you have just copied estimated figures into the actuals because they match exactly. Don't do that!!!"

I was wrong/drunk/something! I was looking at your Section L KFL and VIF. and I think I must have been drunk because your numbers there are actually great (see below). Who knows what I was thinking :roll:.

One last question for you...

Back in post #1239 here last week, you said, "My efficiency still appears to be the same, around 65 percent." I know you realise the diff between EIK and EIF now but I'm not sure if amongst our posts we have explained that efficiency (of whatever type) should be lower for a high gravity brew than a low gravity brew. In other words, unless you are brewing exactly the same gravity beer over and over, then you should not be getting the same 'efficiency' on all your brews. In other words, 'efficiency' is not a constant.

Nice Job!

Finally, as Mad-Scientist said above, nice job on recording all those actual figures. Now that I have looked at them sober, I'd put that BIABAcus of yours as equal to the best (most comprehensive) actuals posted. I'm really looking forward to seeing how the next brew turns out. Remember to move that gallon to 'Water Used in a Sparge' for the next brew.

And one thing I am not sure we have discussed is whether you have been enjoying the beers :think:. Are they tasting good?

:peace:
PP
Last edited by PistolPatch on 24 Apr 2013, 21:21, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1256 made 12 years ago
My main homie Pistolpatch,

Thanks for your very detailed response. I don't know how you are able to respond to practically everyone's posts. Are you a magician? Thank you for clarifying about my actuals and my last biabicus. I have to admit that I had to crack one open and listen to some sad love songs after you said my numbers were wack. :P Anyways I feel much better now. I definitely have noticed that I need more grain when withholding the gallon, but with my 5 gallon brewpot its the only way right now for me to brew my higher abv IPA's. I feel that I understand the biabicus pretty well and the issues with scaling most recipes. I have to admit when I first came here I didn't have a clue what was going on and now I do thanks to you. I read the section where you said higher abv beers will have lower efficiency (EOBE-I'm never going to say efficiency again without being specific). I suppose my 6 percent IPA's are on the high side. I guess what I'm saying is if I hadn't sparged with the some of the gallon I still would have been 5 or 6 points low on my Starting gravity. Thats the whole reason I did it. I think I was closer though because I measured out my water very carefully. ( I was as much as 10 points low on previous brews. So what it all boils down to (haha) is 65% EOBE a good number for a 6 percent beer without a sparge? Oh and yes all of my beers have turned out excellent and from my samples from the fermenter my Citra IPA might be the best I've ever done. :)

Metalhophead

Post #1257 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:So what it all boils down to (haha) is 65% EOBE a good number for a 6 percent beer without a sparge?
Hey Fred, Your reported 'actuals' from the BIABacus was an EOBE of 70.6%, which is good. Like PP said, you are working with a manageable size grain bill that you should be able to move that 3.8 L of water over to 'water used in a sparge', then you can expect an 80% EOBE on this recipe next time, which is a very good efficiency rate and will use less grain. :)

Cheers...
Last edited by Mad_Scientist on 25 Apr 2013, 03:50, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1258 made 12 years ago
It was 70.6 because I did a small sparge, but if I hadn't done that I would have still been 5 or 6 points below my starting gravity. After I lifted the bag I measured 1.050. Since I have been low on all my biabs so far I sparged with some of the water and kinda just figured it out to get to 1.056 (preboil gravity). I also noticed that if I enter 1.067 as my final gravity only then does my EOBE match the estimate. Does this mean that the biabicus is basing everything off the original recipe's gravity and not what I would entered in the section "For this batch though, I'd like to try____".

Metalhophead

Post #1259 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:It was 70.6 because I did a small sparge, but if I hadn't done that I would have still been 5 or 6 points below my starting gravity. After I lifted the bag I measured 1.050. Since I have been low on all my biabs so far I sparged with some of the water and kinda just figured it out to get to 1.056 (preboil gravity). I also noticed that if I enter 1.067 as my final gravity only then does my EOBE match the estimate. Does this mean that the biabicus is basing everything off the original recipe's gravity and not what I would entered in the section "For this batch though, I'd like to try____".

Metalhophead
After you lifted your bag and measured, you should have got a 1.076 (estimated), see Section M, pre-lauter gravity (PLG). And let's say, you 'added the 3.8 L before the boil', that's the GIK, you should have gotten a 1.055 (estimated) at that point. By sparging 'some' of the water and arriving at a 1.056 and 14.90 L VIK (14.39 L VIK estimated), I guess you did good for yourself.

I don't know what you mean by 'but if I hadn't done that I would have still been 5 or 6 points below my starting gravity'. How do you figure that?

And finally, the BIABacus does calculate the OG you entered, just delete it and you'll see the grain changes and 'the whole shebang'. :)
Last edited by Mad_Scientist on 25 Apr 2013, 05:12, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1261 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:My main homie...
:lol:

As for the responding to posts in detail bit, I always start off thinking this will take about 5 or 10 minutes and somehow it always takes ages longer :? :scratch:.

Btw, on the actuals thing, what I think happened is that I was looking at someone else's file but it was also in Libre or Open Office and so was the same colour as yours :P.. Often hae too many files open here :roll:.

Fred and Richard (MS),

I think there is possibly still an efficiency problem going on here as Fred only scored the gravity he wanted by sparging which he did not originally intend to do / set up in his BIABacus. This is why on the next brew, I want Fred to move that gallon into the 'Water Used in Sparge' field and take great measurements like he did on this brew. If the next brew falls short on gravity then we can look at a few other things.

Fred, as for that question, "Is 65% EOBE a good number for a 6% beer without a sparge?" that is not quite the right question. The right question would be more, "If I held back 25% of my TWN in a brew and used that as a dilution, would it be reasonable for me to expect 65% EOBE on a 6% ABV brew?" In that case, the answer would be yes. The estimated EIK and EOBE efficiencies in Setion P of the BIABacus will confirm this.

Anyway, no more sad love songs :lol: and that is great news that the beers are excellent. It just goes to show that you don't have to worry about the numbers too much.

:peace:
PP
Last edited by PistolPatch on 25 Apr 2013, 18:22, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1262 made 12 years ago
Pistolpatch,

I will calculate my next recipe with a sparge. Could the fact that I'm only doing a sixty minute mash be whats causing my numbers to be low? I'm still curious about the darkness of my Centennial IPA from the 11 percent crystal 60. Like I said before I assume its darker because I increased the amount. My Chinook had 5% crystal 80 and is lighter. I intentionally increased the amount of crystal on my Centennial to make it sweeter, but oddly from my sample I tasted it seems fairly bitter (though I guess I did increase the bittering charge as well). Right now I'm just trying to brew similar beers just with different hops and different levels of crystal so I can learn the difference between them.

Metalhophead

Post #1263 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:Could the fact that I'm only doing a sixty minute mash be whats causing my numbers to be low?
Hey Fred, BIABrewer is collecting data on Mash Gravity Figures Needed for BIABacus
You can get a couple more points going to a 90 mins mash, and a few more by doing a mash-out, 'your mileage may vary'.

metalhophead wrote: I'm still curious about the darkness of my Centennial IPA from the 11 percent crystal 60. Like I said before I assume its darker because I increased the amount. My Chinook had 5% crystal 80 and is lighter. I intentionally increased the amount of crystal on my Centennial to make it sweeter, but oddly from my sample I tasted it seems fairly bitter (though I guess I did increase the bittering charge as well). Right now I'm just trying to brew similar beers just with different hops and different levels of crystal so I can learn the difference between them.
There is a color conversion tool on the BIABacus. Research the color and plug the EBC number in Section C.
Last edited by Mad_Scientist on 26 Apr 2013, 05:40, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1264 made 12 years ago
Thanks. Man I will read up on he ebc. Its like no matter how much you learn about brewing there is always a new detail you can learn. I finally was able to score some galaxy hops. Here is my next recipe.

Metalhophead

EDIT: Name of file changed to prevent confusion.
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Last edited by metalhophead on 27 Apr 2013, 00:40, edited 6 times in total.

Post #1265 made 12 years ago
Hi ya Fred. Main homie here :),

We have a big problemo with the file above. It is not the recipe for NRB's All Amarillo Ale!!!! It's important to get the file name right otherwise some other poor bugger might brew it thinking it is the recipe so named. And, how are you going to find the recipe again? Recipe name has now been changed

When you do re-upload it, you'll also need to to link what recipe you are copying from... I'm assuming that seeing you put an EOBV-A figure in Section D, you are copying a recipe. If you were designing a recipe, you would fill out the second line of Section D instead.

All that being said, the recipe looks a bit massive on the hops but I'm not skilled on that side of thing. Main one that worries me is the 50 grams at 5 mins. Not sure why the 5 mins instead of 0 mins or why the big quantity?

One last thing. As Richard mentioned above, do the 90 minute mash and mash-out. Not sure how we missed this before but that is important. It might be even more important on these high gravity beers you have been doing. We don't have enough numbers yet to know for sure.

90 minutes and mash-out!!!
PP
Last edited by PistolPatch on 27 Apr 2013, 18:25, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1266 made 12 years ago
PP, it seems to me that Fred mentioned at one time that he was having probs changing the name of his file. I can't put my finger on the post but I am sure he mentioned this and apologized for all of his recipes having the same name. Maybe Fred could repost this with details.
AWOL

Post #1267 made 12 years ago
Hey guys! I'm still alive! I'm getting married in a few weeks and it has started to get a little crazy. That recipe was an attempt at making my own recipe. I now see the smaller Section in D you are talking about Pistolpatch. What I was attempting to do was brew simple IPA's with varying amounts of crystal and different hops to try and learn the flavors each one imparts. I came to the conclusion that most IPA's I like are around 6 percent and 65 IBU's. So I played around with the hop additions until I got similar numbers. I have seen all kinds of different hop schedules. I like hops so I dont think the large additions at the end will be a problem. I have heard of people not even doing bittering additions and adding all of the hops toward the end. Anyways I'm not sure it will be brewing before I get married. I Bottled my Citra IPA! It tasted great with no carbonation!

Metalhophead

Post #1268 made 12 years ago
I've done a few kits now and time to up my game....giving biab a whirl. I have a 30l burco boiler. Given that summer (hopefully) is on its way I'm going for a refreshing wheat beer.

Here's the recipe I'd like to do and I would like to maximise the size of my brew for my modest sized boiler!

Recipe Gravity: 1.054 OG
Recipe Bitterness: 23 IBU
Recipe Color: 4 SRM
Estimated FG: 1.014
Alcohol by Volume: 5.2%
Alcohol by Weight: 4.1%

3lb of Wheat Malt
1.5lb of Pilsner Malt
.5lb CaraPils

.25oz Saaz 60min
.50oz Saaz 40min
.25oz Saaz 20min
.25oz Tettnanger(US) 5min

.5 teaspoon corriander seed 10min
1 oz fresh orange zest/peel 10min
1 teaspoon irish moss 10min

Bring 4 gal to 165f for mashing

http://community.mrbeer.com/forum/20-ad ... le-biab-ag

Here's the dimensions of my boiler

Capacity Litres: 30
Capacity Cups: 180
Dimensions: 390(w) x 480(h) x 390(d)mm
Weight: 6kg
Heat Up Time: 70 Minutes
Power: 3kW

I have two 25 litre fermentation vessels.

Post #1269 made 12 years ago
metalhophead wrote:Hey guys! I'm still alive! I'm getting married in a few weeks and it has started to get a little crazy...
Here we go again :smoke:. Fred, the last guy that got married here was Wizard78 and we never head from him again. Send him a PM - "Whassup?"
spanspoon wrote:I've done a few kits now and time to up my game....giving biab a whirl. I have a 30l burco boiler. Given that summer (hopefully) is on its way I'm going for a refreshing wheat beer...
Apologies, having a lot of problems with my computer the last few weeks spanspoon. I write a lot of stuff and as I am writing, the screen shuts down and my text appears in the web address search bar and 30/45/60 mins work goes down the drain. As you can imagine, that is is severely pissing me off!

I just lost a lot I had written to you.

Anyway, what I wrote about was 'low integrity' recipes. I don't think you should brew the recipe above - we can do better. Search the word 'integrity' on this site and you will see why.

We can brew the above recipe but the results might be a bit random. Do you have your heart set on that particular recipe?

:peace:
PP
Last edited by PistolPatch on 07 May 2013, 20:55, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1270 made 12 years ago
I've done my first two BIAB AG brews and have used the BIABacus. It is a fantastic spreadsheet and I can see no need to use any other software. It's much easier to use than Beersmith.

My first was a clone of Jennings Cocker Hoop from Graham Wheeler's book.
AG1 - BIABacus PR1.3 - GW Cocker Hoop.xls
This went very well but I had a bit of a leak through the screw holes where my Buffalo boiler's handles attach. So for my second brew I held back some of the water for a sparge to ensure the level never got as high as the handles. This recipe was an attempt at an AG version of a fantastic extract lager kit that I had done. This also went very well although I forget to measure the end of boil volume so I have put a guesstimate in the spreadsheet.
AG2 - BIABacus PR1.3 - Tettnang Tiger Lager.xls
So, any comments on these? My efficiencies seem quite high as I am getting more and stronger beer than I expected. The lager was mashed for 3 hours to fit round a family swimming trip so I guess that must have helped.
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Last edited by rpt on 09 May 2013, 01:42, edited 6 times in total.

Post #1271 made 12 years ago
Good on you rpt :salute:,

You have done a great job on working all this out on your own. Very nice! The only error I could find which is totally minor is on the first sheet, you typed in the grain and ho names on the left and right hand sides of Section C and D. This is only necessary if you actually want to use something different from the original recipe. This didn't happen on the second file so I reckon you know this now anyway ;).

Great recording of your numbers as well.

As for the efficiencies, they are fine. If you have everything right in your brewing, you will do better than the auto-efficiency estimates of the BIABacus. For example, it is not uncommon to get over 90% EIK on an average gravity brew (say 1.050) if your water etc, times and temps are right. The BIABacus favours a lower auto-estimate as it is a lot easier to deal with more beer of a higher gravity than the reverse.

Because you have taken several sets of measurements on your first two brews, you could choose to maybe adjust the auto-efficiency in Section X by 5%.

If you keep going the way you are going, after five brews, you will have some excellent info with which you will be able to fine-tune the BIABacus auto-estimates. Because your end of day volumes are coming out so close, the only thing I would change until you have done five brews is the auto-efficiency thing. Changing anything else will just muddy the waters for now.

Congrats again :thumbs:
PP
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Post #1272 made 12 years ago
Hi,

Im about to embark on my 1st BIAG brew (and only my 2nd AG brew)
I received a 1 gallon Brooklyn Brew Shop kit a few weeks ago, and while I LOVED making it, I don’t think it was a huge success! The mini-BIAG method seem a lot more straight forward compared to the BBS method of strainers/extra pots etc..

Ive used the BIABacus to scale the suggested All Amarillo recipe to 1 gallon/3.78L (which is the size of my fermenting bottle)

Does it look OK?

And if you don’t mind, I have a few questions?

1) What is the difference between the TWN, Mash vol & VIK? – and which amount should I put in my pot?

2) If im boiling for 90mins, is it right that im not adding my first hops until after 30 mins?

3) If I carefully clean/sanitise my sample jar/hydrometer – is it OK to take a reading before I pitch the yeast, then tip the sample into the fermeter? And equally, do the same when im bottling? – Or should I just ‘go with the flow’ at this stage, and not bother too much about it ?

Thanks :)

****print out***

[center]BIABacus Pre-Release 1.3 RECIPE REPORT[/center]
[center]BIAB Recipe Designer, Calculator and Scaler.[/center]
[center](Please visit http://www.biabrewer.info" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; for the latest version.)[/center]
[center]NRB's All Amarillo APA - Batch 1[/center]

Recipe Overview

Brewer: BIABrewer - Credit NRB
Style: APA
Source Recipe Link:

Original Gravity (OG): 1.058
IBU's (Tinseth): 69.4
Bitterness to Gravity Ratio: 1.2
Colour: 11.2 EBC = 5.7 SRM
ABV%: 5.24

Efficiency into Kettle (EIK): 86.4 %
Efficiency into Fermentor (EIF): 74 %

Note: This is a Pure BIAB (Full Volume Mash)

Times and Temperatures

Mash: 90 mins at 66 C = 150.8 F
Boil: 90 min
Ferment: 10 days at 17 C = 62.6 F

Volumes & Gravities

Total Water Needed (TWN): 8.07 L = 2.13 G
Volume into Kettle (VIK): 7.74 L = 2.04 G @ 1.034
End of Boil Volume - Ambient (EOBV-A): 4.41 L = 1.16 G @ 1.058
Volume into Fermentor (VIF): 3.78 L = 1 G @ 1.058
Volume into Packaging (VIP): 3.5 L = 0.92 G @ 1.017 assuming apparent attenuation of 70 %

The Grain Bill (Also includes extracts, sugars and adjuncts)

76.8% Maris Otter (5.5 EBC = 2.8 SRM) 768 grams = 1.69 pounds
15.4% Munich 1 (17.7 EBC = 9 SRM) 154 grams = 0.34 pounds
7.8% Carapils (5 EBC = 2.5 SRM) 78 grams = 0.17 pounds

The Hop Bill (Based on Tinseth Formula)

33.6 IBU Amarillo Pellets (10.9%AA) 5.8 grams = 0.203 ounces at 60 mins
26 IBU Amarillo Pellets (10.9%AA) 7.4 grams = 0.26 ounces at 20 mins
9.7 IBU Amarillo Pellets (10.9%AA) 8.3 grams = 0.294 ounces at 5 mins

Mash Steps

Mash Type: Pure BIAB (Full Volume Mash) for 90 mins at 66 C = 150.8 F

Mashout for for 1 mins at 78 C = 172.4 F
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Last edited by Zymeck on 09 May 2013, 22:32, edited 6 times in total.

Post #1273 made 12 years ago
Hi PP

Thanks for your kind words. I will have a go with changing the auto efficiency for my next brew. That's just the information I was after.

I'd like to make a few comments and suggestions about the BIABacus - is this the right thread or is there another one for this? I think it's fantastic as is but I'd love to help make it even better.

Thanks again,
Richard.

Post #1274 made 12 years ago
Zymeck, I'll answer your questions in a separate post. Before that...
rpt wrote:I'd like to make a few comments and suggestions about the BIABacus - is this the right thread or is there another one for this? I think it's fantastic as is but I'd love to help make it even better.
Good stuff rpt. The best thread for suggestions is the pre-release thread. Bear in mind that any suggestions that require the writing of macros into the spreadsheet won't be done. When they have been done in the past they have failed to work cross-platform and so ended up being stripped away.

:peace:
Last edited by PistolPatch on 10 May 2013, 06:10, edited 6 times in total.
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Post #1275 made 12 years ago
Zymeck, nice job on the BIABacus. I can't find a single error - everything is great!!! I'm off to work soon so will jumpo straigh to your questions...

1. If you are doing a pure (full-volume) BIAB such as you will be doing, the volumes can be seen pictorially in this post. Click on the pic or save it to your computer to view it more easilly.

From that you'll see that TWN is the amount of water you will need at room temperature for your brew. When heated, it expands a little. We call this 'Strike Water Neeeded - SWN'. When you put the grain in, the volume increases again. We call that Mash Volume. When you take the spent grain out, it will have left behind most of it's sugar content but will have absorbed some water. The end result is that we end up with a bit less volume in the kettle before the boil than we started with. We call that 'Volume into Kettle (VIK)' which, on reflection, could be a pretty confusing term to a new, BIAB all-grainer as it is a more 'traditional' term really. We might have to re-think that one. For now though, it is how much wort is in your kettle at the beginning if the boil.

2. I always do 90 minute boils and tend to add my first hop addition at 75 minutes. This gives the boil a chance to settle down whilst giving the first hop addition lots of time in the kettle.

3. It is fine to take a sample before you pitch the yeast and pour it back in assuming you will do as you say on the cleanliness side. I'd probably avoid the bottling one though unless you pour that sample into a single bottle, top it up and then prime it individually.

Have fun!
PP
Last edited by PistolPatch on 10 May 2013, 06:27, edited 6 times in total.
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