Discussion:
Adapting a wine fridge for fermenting
(too old to reply)
Joerg
2017-01-11 16:12:20 UTC
Permalink
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be able
to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal secondary
plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me to keep on
brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!

Loading Image...&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500

The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start up
the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...

The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while Fermentis
lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with those kits
(like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in that by design
the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it will default to
55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that could ruin my
beers if I don't catch it for a few days.

What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and build
something that can go higher in temperature?

Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Tom Biasi
2017-01-11 17:48:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be able
to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal secondary
plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me to keep on
brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start up
the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while Fermentis
lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with those kits
(like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in that by design
the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it will default to
55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that could ruin my
beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and build
something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Joerg
2017-01-11 18:46:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be able
to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal secondary
plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me to keep on
brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start up
the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while Fermentis
lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with those kits
(like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in that by design
the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it will default to
55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that could ruin my
beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and build
something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Ok, but being an engineer I'll have to build my own. Anything else would
feel like cheating.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Tom Biasi
2017-01-11 19:19:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be able
to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal secondary
plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me to keep on
brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start up
the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while Fermentis
lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with those kits
(like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in that by design
the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it will default to
55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that could ruin my
beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and build
something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Ok, but being an engineer I'll have to build my own. Anything else would
feel like cheating.
I also was an engineer, now if I can buy it off the shelf my life is easier.
The Ranco I use can select cool or heat automatically. All I need to
heat is a 100 watt incandescent bulb.
To heat with low voltage would probably not be practical.
Joerg
2017-01-11 20:07:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be able
to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal secondary
plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me to keep on
brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start up
the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while Fermentis
lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with those kits
(like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in that by design
the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it will default to
55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that could ruin my
beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and build
something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Ok, but being an engineer I'll have to build my own. Anything else would
feel like cheating.
I also was an engineer, now if I can buy it off the shelf my life is easier.
Same here if cost is within reason. The external controller I have works
great but it is clumsy, flopping around on top of the fridge. I'd like
to have a more elegant integrated solution and I'll have to tie into the
compressor relay anyhow. Maybe I can press an LM35 sensor IC, some
transistors and resistors into service. I've got all that here. Analog
stuff has less of a chance to go on the fritz than a digital controller.
Post by Tom Biasi
The Ranco I use can select cool or heat automatically. All I need to
heat is a 100 watt incandescent bulb.
My external controller must be set to heat or cool mode. That's ok
because the switch-over only happens twice a year. I have a 40W bulb in
there right now to see if that suffices in getting the temp from 50F to 65F.
Post by Tom Biasi
To heat with low voltage would probably not be practical.
It is more safe. Running mains wiring inside a fridge where spills can
happen isn't so great. About three weeks ago I had a Belgian Tripel with
BE-256 yeast go nuclear on me. Lid came off, kraeusen hissing out, wort
spewing, fun.

Also, low voltage allows me to use under-carpet speaker cable or similar
that is very flat and would go under the door gasket without deforming
it much. Even if 100W was needed that would only be 4 amps when using a
24V industrial transformer. Essentially a big old 4 ohms ballast
resistor. Or two automotive headlight bulbs but the beer might not like
such bright light.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-12 22:56:51 UTC
Permalink
Joerg <***@analogconsultants.com> wrote in news:***@mid.individual.net:

snip
Post by Joerg
Also, low voltage allows me to use under-carpet speaker cable or
similar that is very flat and would go under the door gasket without
deforming it much. Even if 100W was needed that would only be 4 amps
when using a 24V industrial transformer. Essentially a big old 4 ohms
ballast resistor. Or two automotive headlight bulbs but the beer might
not like such bright light.
Cover the beer with a blanket.
Joerg
2017-01-12 23:07:32 UTC
Permalink
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
Also, low voltage allows me to use under-carpet speaker cable or
similar that is very flat and would go under the door gasket without
deforming it much. Even if 100W was needed that would only be 4 amps
when using a 24V industrial transformer. Essentially a big old 4 ohms
ballast resistor. Or two automotive headlight bulbs but the beer might
not like such bright light.
Cover the beer with a blanket.
That has a low WAF :-)

This new fridge is well insulated. A 40W bulb yesterday got it from 50F
to 65F within less than an hour.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Scott Alfter
2017-01-17 16:40:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Ok, but being an engineer I'll have to build my own. Anything else would
feel like cheating.
For some ideas in that vein, there's this:

https://alfter.us/wp/beer-stuff/brewing-with-the-raspberry-pi/

One potential snag is that Chromium is no longer available for the original
Raspberry Pi...though if you're running one of the newer versions (Raspberry
Pi 2 or 3), you can run reasonably current versions of Chromium on them. On
the original, you'll need to experiment with one of the other browsers. At
work, we have some Raspberry Pis running Epiphany to provide digital
signage; that might be a workable substitute.

_/_
/ v \ Scott Alfter (remove the obvious to send mail)
(IIGS( https://alfter.us/ Top-posting!
\_^_/ >What's the most annoying thing on Usenet?
Joerg
2017-01-17 17:31:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by Scott Alfter
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
Ok, but being an engineer I'll have to build my own. Anything else would
feel like cheating.
https://alfter.us/wp/beer-stuff/brewing-with-the-raspberry-pi/
One potential snag is that Chromium is no longer available for the original
Raspberry Pi...though if you're running one of the newer versions (Raspberry
Pi 2 or 3), you can run reasonably current versions of Chromium on them. On
the original, you'll need to experiment with one of the other browsers. At
work, we have some Raspberry Pis running Epiphany to provide digital
signage; that might be a workable substitute.
Thanks but I'd like to keep things simple and most of all analog. In my
case it will be an LM35, a TLV431, a LM339, a transistor plus another
one for the heater, spiced with some resistors and capacitors. Oh, and a
10-turn potentiometer for the real science lab feel. Maybe a nice big
steampunk meter for the fermenter temperature if I can find a suitable one.

The mechanical re-build of the fridge is hardest but now almost done.
I'll also have to buy some very flat cable capable of carrying 5-10 amps
so I can build a heater for inside. This turns out to be needed during
winter.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
baloonon
2017-01-12 00:36:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is
a bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing
a lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be
able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal
secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me
to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start
up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it
will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that
could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that
basement room just so the fermenters are happy.
If the fermenters are well insulated they shouldn't need a lot of extra
heat. You could easily put an active fermenter next to a fermenter or
other big container filled with warm water and then wrap them with sleeping
blankets or a hot water heater blanket and that ought to do pretty well
unless the basement is really cold.
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
I think that's right, although if power outages are the only concern, it's
also possible to get a power brick like PCs have that ought to keep power
stable during a brief blip in supply.

But I think the big risk of going with the onboard controller instead of
getting a new one is that the existing one isn't accurate -- maybe the
thermometer is in a bad place or something else makes the whole thing run
cool or warm, and you'd be better off with something you have more control
over. One you could monitor and control wirelessly would be especially
nice.
Joerg
2017-01-12 15:23:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is
a bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing
a lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be
able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal
secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me
to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start
up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it
will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that
could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that
basement room just so the fermenters are happy.
If the fermenters are well insulated they shouldn't need a lot of extra
heat. You could easily put an active fermenter next to a fermenter or
other big container filled with warm water and then wrap them with sleeping
blankets or a hot water heater blanket and that ought to do pretty well
unless the basement is really cold.
That is the kind of kludge I want to avoid because the downstairs isn't
a bland basement but a real room of the house. And I am married :-)
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
I think that's right, although if power outages are the only concern, it's
also possible to get a power brick like PCs have that ought to keep power
stable during a brief blip in supply.
Bricks won't drive a fridge compressor, they are most likely to stall
out on start. I could make a little battery backup just for the
controller but then I might as well build a new and better one. I was
just wondering if 65F is high enough.
Post by Joerg
But I think the big risk of going with the onboard controller instead of
getting a new one is that the existing one isn't accurate -- maybe the
thermometer is in a bad place or something else makes the whole thing run
cool or warm, and you'd be better off with something you have more control
over. One you could monitor and control wirelessly would be especially
nice.
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors for
proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section. What is
not so good is the code in the micro controller that does the regulation.

I want to keep it simple so it'll be an analog circuit. Some day I might
add a temp monitor that sends into the WiFi or wired LAN. However, so
far the "Internet of Things" is largely hype just like home automation
was for decades.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
baloonon
2017-01-12 17:49:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It
is a bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After
removing a lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it
should be able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and
two 5-gal secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This
would allow me to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers.
Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably
start up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However
...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and
it will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if
that could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that
I can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven
externally with a separate regulator and safely run with low
voltage. This would save us pellet fuel because right now I am
often heating that basement room just so the fermenters are happy.
If the fermenters are well insulated they shouldn't need a lot of
extra heat. You could easily put an active fermenter next to a
fermenter or other big container filled with warm water and then wrap
them with sleeping blankets or a hot water heater blanket and that
ought to do pretty well unless the basement is really cold.
That is the kind of kludge I want to avoid because the downstairs
isn't a bland basement but a real room of the house. And I am married
:-)
Wait, the fermenters are in a regular room? Maybe covering the
insulation with a nice quilt would do the job then....

At any rate, it sounds like the wine fridge is a much classier option
than a fiberglass covering.
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
I think that's right, although if power outages are the only concern,
it's also possible to get a power brick like PCs have that ought to
keep power stable during a brief blip in supply.
Bricks won't drive a fridge compressor, they are most likely to stall
out on start. I could make a little battery backup just for the
controller but then I might as well build a new and better one. I was
just wondering if 65F is high enough.
I know I've seen them on lab fridges, maybe they're a lot more expensive
than typical ones.

At any rate, 48-65F is fine for most yeasts except a number of Belgians,
and for those you'd want a heater during the winter. Interior temps of
active fermenters are often a few degrees higher than external temps, so
the temp may actually be 66-68F at max, which is generally also fine.
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
But I think the big risk of going with the onboard controller instead
of getting a new one is that the existing one isn't accurate -- maybe
the thermometer is in a bad place or something else makes the whole
thing run cool or warm, and you'd be better off with something you
have more control over. One you could monitor and control wirelessly
would be especially nice.
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does the
regulation.
Depending on insulation, there might be a notable difference between the
far interior and the area by the door, which can be a bug or a feature
depending on how it works out.
Post by Joerg
I want to keep it simple so it'll be an analog circuit. Some day I
might add a temp monitor that sends into the WiFi or wired LAN.
However, so far the "Internet of Things" is largely hype just like
home automation was for decades.
I've read you can do some interesting stuff with a Raspberry Pi,
although that is more tinkering than I want to think about for the
immediate present. Unfortunately, wireless cooking thermometers tend
not to have the kind of battery life that would make them a good long
term option.
Joerg
2017-01-12 18:54:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by baloonon
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It
is a bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After
removing a lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it
should be able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and
two 5-gal secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This
would allow me to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers.
Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
Post by Tom Biasi
Post by Joerg
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably
start up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However
...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and
it will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if
that could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that
I can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven
externally with a separate regulator and safely run with low
voltage. This would save us pellet fuel because right now I am
often heating that basement room just so the fermenters are happy.
If the fermenters are well insulated they shouldn't need a lot of
extra heat. You could easily put an active fermenter next to a
fermenter or other big container filled with warm water and then wrap
them with sleeping blankets or a hot water heater blanket and that
ought to do pretty well unless the basement is really cold.
That is the kind of kludge I want to avoid because the downstairs
isn't a bland basement but a real room of the house. And I am married
:-)
Wait, the fermenters are in a regular room? Maybe covering the
insulation with a nice quilt would do the job then....
Downstairs we only heat via pellet stove if needed. So in the winter
that room often drops to 58F or less. The only reason I am keeping it
above 62F right now are the four fermenters. Mostly for the two primary
ones.
Post by baloonon
At any rate, it sounds like the wine fridge is a much classier option
than a fiberglass covering.
It looks very posh but less so now that the wooden racks and metal rails
in the lower half are removed. Today I'll have to build and install a
sturdy mid-shelf and beef up the bottom because they will have to safely
hold 80 lbs each without much flexing. It'll have smooth formica topping
to that I can slide heavy buckets and bottles in and out easier and most
of all without lifting while having my arms streched out (my lower back
is not so great). If still too hard I'll build little "trucks",
microscopic furniture dollies or just wood plates with piano casters
underneath.

The fridge will go into a utility room downstairs so its looks are less
important. I did try yesterday and it can really hold two 6-1/2 gallon
fermenter buckets in the top after removing the rails. Two 5-gal water
cooler bottles in the bottom are easy, they even fit with the rails left
it (they were hard to remove).
Post by baloonon
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
Post by Tom Biasi
My vote is to get a new controller like a Ranco.
I think that's right, although if power outages are the only concern,
it's also possible to get a power brick like PCs have that ought to
keep power stable during a brief blip in supply.
Bricks won't drive a fridge compressor, they are most likely to stall
out on start. I could make a little battery backup just for the
controller but then I might as well build a new and better one. I was
just wondering if 65F is high enough.
I know I've seen them on lab fridges, maybe they're a lot more expensive
than typical ones.
Oh yeah, the ones for high surge current are expensive.
Post by baloonon
At any rate, 48-65F is fine for most yeasts except a number of Belgians,
and for those you'd want a heater during the winter. Interior temps of
active fermenters are often a few degrees higher than external temps, so
the temp may actually be 66-68F at max, which is generally also fine.
What I am planning to do after all the mechanical mods are complete is
build a temp sense and compressor control circuit where I can detach the
sensor and strap it to the fermenter that has the most recent load in
it. This should avoid exceeding safe limits where the thing could go
nuclear or develop fusel oils.

Moving the fridge downstairs will be a white-knuckle job. Difficult. I
have removed everything that can be removed in order to reduce weight.
It's either down a very narrow stair case or all around the house and
half way down a very steep driveway with a 90 degree turn at the gate.
Post by baloonon
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
But I think the big risk of going with the onboard controller instead
of getting a new one is that the existing one isn't accurate -- maybe
the thermometer is in a bad place or something else makes the whole
thing run cool or warm, and you'd be better off with something you
have more control over. One you could monitor and control wirelessly
would be especially nice.
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does the
regulation.
Depending on insulation, there might be a notable difference between the
far interior and the area by the door, which can be a bug or a feature
depending on how it works out.
Currently it has the sensors in back. The door is a very heavy dual-pane
deal like you see on upright supermarket freezers. I had a hard time
lifting it while carrying it downstairs.

The mid-section which contains the exisitng controller blocks air flow a
lot because it is like a complete shelf. It has 1" thick styrofoam
inside. The internal heat exchanger in the lower half seems to have a
lot more freon channels than the one in the upper half. While there are
no two different regulating circuits they say in the manual that the
lower half is colder for white wine storage. Red wine goes in the upper
half. Well, not anymore. I plan to put the primary fermenters in the
upper half and the secondary ones in the lower so that the secondary is
a bit cooler. Should also help whenever I want to do cold-crashing.
Post by baloonon
Post by Joerg
I want to keep it simple so it'll be an analog circuit. Some day I
might add a temp monitor that sends into the WiFi or wired LAN.
However, so far the "Internet of Things" is largely hype just like
home automation was for decades.
I've read you can do some interesting stuff with a Raspberry Pi,
although that is more tinkering than I want to think about for the
immediate present.
A Raspberry Pi would be overkill here. What I'll do first on a rainy day
is hack the existing controller so that I can pipe out the 5V supply,
ground and a switchable splice in the compressor control line. Then I'll
place a switch "Internal-External" and a large phono jack or something.
That allows me to turn the compressor off for times when I want to heat
and to plug in my own circuitry.

Then I'll build my own little electronics and mount that to the right
wall in the upper half where the guides used to be, using the existing
screw locations. With the option to connect a wire with sensor to that.
If I really get carried away maybe I cram a micro controller in there
for a real PID algorithm for more precise and even temperature control.
It could also control a resistor bank for heating although I'll have to
somehow feed in power for that.

The redneck method for heating it would be to place a brick in front of
our wood stove, wrap it in an old towel in the evening and place it in
the top half of the wine fridge. I'll probably try that before getting
carried away making a heater box and all.
Post by baloonon
... Unfortunately, wireless cooking thermometers tend
not to have the kind of battery life that would make them a good long
term option.
That's easy. I'll have 5V available so I'd regulate that down to 3V and
the trabnsmitter would be powered all the time. Same with the receiver
in the office and maybe another one somewhere else. The proble with
those is paltry range. This can be improved with a better antenna but
technically that would violate its FCC compliance certification.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
baloonon
2017-01-12 19:49:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by baloonon
... Unfortunately, wireless cooking thermometers tend
not to have the kind of battery life that would make them a good long
term option.
That's easy. I'll have 5V available so I'd regulate that down to 3V and
the trabnsmitter would be powered all the time. Same with the receiver
in the office and maybe another one somewhere else. The proble with
those is paltry range. This can be improved with a better antenna but
technically that would violate its FCC compliance certification.
Obviously use this as an excuse to buy a new house. Or maybe build a
brewery in the backyard.
Joerg
2017-01-12 21:35:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by baloonon
Post by Joerg
Post by baloonon
... Unfortunately, wireless cooking thermometers tend
not to have the kind of battery life that would make them a good long
term option.
That's easy. I'll have 5V available so I'd regulate that down to 3V and
the trabnsmitter would be powered all the time. Same with the receiver
in the office and maybe another one somewhere else. The proble with
those is paltry range. This can be improved with a better antenna but
technically that would violate its FCC compliance certification.
Obviously use this as an excuse to buy a new house. Or maybe build a
brewery in the backyard.
:-)

This utility room actually contains the house wiring home-run point so
all the LAN cables come together at a hub there. It would be easy to tie
in there if I ever wanted to do that. There are also lots of spare wires
on uncommitted CAT5 running throughout the house so I could even hook up
an analog gauge.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-12 23:01:47 UTC
Permalink
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does the
regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for fridge or
incubator reliable temperature checking: put your thermometer in a
container of distilled water and just leave it on a shelf. The thermom.
will always read the average temp because the teemp of the thermal mass of
water will not change quickly. Neither will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Joerg
2017-01-12 23:10:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does the
regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for fridge or
incubator reliable temperature checking: put your thermometer in a
container of distilled water and just leave it on a shelf. The thermom.
will always read the average temp because the teemp of the thermal mass of
water will not change quickly. Neither will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Sure but the challenge is to find one really accurate and calibrated
thermometer. For boil temps that is easy because all you need to know is
the altitude and then the water temperature is known. Not so easy around
60F. Even industrial grade thermocouples can be 2F off.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-13 14:15:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does
the regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for
fridge or incubator reliable temperature checking: put your
thermometer in a container of distilled water and just leave it on a
shelf. The thermom. will always read the average temp because the
teemp of the thermal mass of water will not change quickly. Neither
will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Sure but the challenge is to find one really accurate and calibrated
thermometer. For boil temps that is easy because all you need to know
is the altitude and then the water temperature is known. Not so easy
around 60F. Even industrial grade thermocouples can be 2F off.
Of course, we had lab-grade thermometers, but even with one off the
shelf at KMart can be-- not calibrated; can't change the thing --checked
against two temp points to find out how much it's off (or if it is). The
two primes are the boiling point (212F/100C) and the freezing point of
distilled water (32F/0C). 60F is only for hydrometer checking. There are
ways to determine the calibration factor for your particular elevation.
I no longer have the cheat sheet at my fingertips and it was a long time
ago.

Also, meant to include that you would put your temp controller's probe
in the jar of water, along with a thermom. to control and keep track of
the ambient temp. in the cabinet. Saves energy!
Joerg
2017-01-14 16:23:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower section.
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does
the regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for
fridge or incubator reliable temperature checking: put your
thermometer in a container of distilled water and just leave it on a
shelf. The thermom. will always read the average temp because the
teemp of the thermal mass of water will not change quickly. Neither
will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Sure but the challenge is to find one really accurate and calibrated
thermometer. For boil temps that is easy because all you need to know
is the altitude and then the water temperature is known. Not so easy
around 60F. Even industrial grade thermocouples can be 2F off.
Of course, we had lab-grade thermometers, but even with one off the
shelf at KMart can be-- not calibrated; can't change the thing --checked
against two temp points to find out how much it's off (or if it is). The
two primes are the boiling point (212F/100C) and the freezing point of
distilled water (32F/0C). 60F is only for hydrometer checking. There are
ways to determine the calibration factor for your particular elevation.
I no longer have the cheat sheet at my fingertips and it was a long time
ago.
Also, meant to include that you would put your temp controller's probe
in the jar of water, along with a thermom. to control and keep track of
the ambient temp. in the cabinet. Saves energy!
How would that save energy? I was planning on having a sensor connected
to my new controller box via 3ft or so of cable. enough to be able to
reach both primary fermenter buckets. It gets strapped to the one of
them and the compressor will be controlled such that it keeps things at
the desired temperature.

Got an LM35 sensor here but first I have to complete the mechanical mods
to the fridge and get it downstairs. Having only hand tools doesn't help
but I'll get it done. Hopefully this weekend.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-15 00:01:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two sensors
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower
section.
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does
the regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for
fridge or incubator reliable temperature checking: put your
thermometer in a container of distilled water and just leave it on a
shelf. The thermom. will always read the average temp because the
teemp of the thermal mass of water will not change quickly. Neither
will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Sure but the challenge is to find one really accurate and calibrated
thermometer. For boil temps that is easy because all you need to know
is the altitude and then the water temperature is known. Not so easy
around 60F. Even industrial grade thermocouples can be 2F off.
Of course, we had lab-grade thermometers, but even with one off the
shelf at KMart can be-- not calibrated; can't change the thing --
checked
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
against two temp points to find out how much it's off (or if it is). The
two primes are the boiling point (212F/100C) and the freezing point of
distilled water (32F/0C). 60F is only for hydrometer checking. There are
ways to determine the calibration factor for your particular
elevation.
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
I no longer have the cheat sheet at my fingertips and it was a long time
ago.
Also, meant to include that you would put your temp controller's probe
in the jar of water, along with a thermom. to control and keep track of
the ambient temp. in the cabinet. Saves energy!
How would that save energy? I was planning on having a sensor
connected
Post by Joerg
to my new controller box via 3ft or so of cable. enough to be able to
reach both primary fermenter buckets. It gets strapped to the one of
them and the compressor will be controlled such that it keeps things at
the desired temperature.
Got an LM35 sensor here but first I have to complete the mechanical mods
to the fridge and get it downstairs. Having only hand tools doesn't help
but I'll get it done. Hopefully this weekend.
How would it save energy? By not cycling any more than needed. Think
about it. You have a 5 gallon mass of fluid at a certain temperature.
That mass will not fluctuate as often as the mass of ambient air.
Therefore, you do not need to cycle the cooling/heating elements as
often by tracking the nonfluctating temperature of a smaller amount of
fluid. Trust me-- it does work beautifully!
Joerg
2017-01-15 15:41:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
snip
Post by Joerg
The temperature sensing seem accurate and I checked the two
sensors
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
for proper positioning. It measures in the upper and lower
section.
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
What is not so good is the code in the micro controller that does
the regulation.
Used to work as a lab tech,years ago. Learned a great trick for
fridge or incubator reliable temperature checking: put your
thermometer in a container of distilled water and just leave it on
a
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
shelf. The thermom. will always read the average temp because the
teemp of the thermal mass of water will not change quickly. Neither
will a carboy/bucket of beer.
Sure but the challenge is to find one really accurate and calibrated
thermometer. For boil temps that is easy because all you need to
know
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
Post by Joerg
is the altitude and then the water temperature is known. Not so easy
around 60F. Even industrial grade thermocouples can be 2F off.
Of course, we had lab-grade thermometers, but even with one off the
shelf at KMart can be-- not calibrated; can't change the thing --
checked
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
against two temp points to find out how much it's off (or if it is).
The
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
two primes are the boiling point (212F/100C) and the freezing point
of
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
distilled water (32F/0C). 60F is only for hydrometer checking. There
are
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
ways to determine the calibration factor for your particular
elevation.
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
I no longer have the cheat sheet at my fingertips and it was a long
time
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
ago.
Also, meant to include that you would put your temp controller's
probe
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
in the jar of water, along with a thermom. to control and keep track
of
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
the ambient temp. in the cabinet. Saves energy!
How would that save energy? I was planning on having a sensor
connected
Post by Joerg
to my new controller box via 3ft or so of cable. enough to be able to
reach both primary fermenter buckets. It gets strapped to the one of
them and the compressor will be controlled such that it keeps things
at
Post by Joerg
the desired temperature.
Got an LM35 sensor here but first I have to complete the mechanical
mods
Post by Joerg
to the fridge and get it downstairs. Having only hand tools doesn't
help
Post by Joerg
but I'll get it done. Hopefully this weekend.
How would it save energy? By not cycling any more than needed. Think
about it. You have a 5 gallon mass of fluid at a certain temperature.
That mass will not fluctuate as often as the mass of ambient air.
Therefore, you do not need to cycle the cooling/heating elements as
often by tracking the nonfluctating temperature of a smaller amount of
fluid. Trust me-- it does work beautifully!
Fast cycling can also be avoided by a huge lowpass in the controller or
by enough hysteresis plus mounting the sensor to a fermenter (which I am
planning to make possible). When the 60 year old Bosch with its original
mechanical thermostat has a fermenter in there it cycles about once per
hour during the hot summer, less at night.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-16 00:11:01 UTC
Permalink
. . . . . . . . .
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
How would it save energy? By not cycling any more than needed. Think
about it. You have a 5 gallon mass of fluid at a certain temperature.
That mass will not fluctuate as often as the mass of ambient air.
Therefore, you do not need to cycle the cooling/heating elements as
often by tracking the nonfluctating temperature of a smaller amount of
fluid. Trust me-- it does work beautifully!
Fast cycling can also be avoided by a huge lowpass in the controller or
by enough hysteresis plus mounting the sensor to a fermenter (which I am
planning to make possible). When the 60 year old Bosch with its original
mechanical thermostat has a fermenter in there it cycles about once per
hour during the hot summer, less at night.
Okay, I was informed guessing. As I said, I used to work in a lab, and what
I outlined was Standard Procedure for incubation chambers and the
refridgerator. The explanation was that a temperature probe in the thermal
mass of 500 ml of distilled water in an Erlenmyer flask would render a much
more accurate control temp reading than a probe hanging in ambient air.
Based my opinion and brewing habits on that. Many successful brews later .
. . . . hmmmm.
Joerg
2017-01-16 16:12:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by D Ash
. . . . . . . . .
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
How would it save energy? By not cycling any more than needed. Think
about it. You have a 5 gallon mass of fluid at a certain temperature.
That mass will not fluctuate as often as the mass of ambient air.
Therefore, you do not need to cycle the cooling/heating elements as
often by tracking the nonfluctating temperature of a smaller amount of
fluid. Trust me-- it does work beautifully!
Fast cycling can also be avoided by a huge lowpass in the controller or
by enough hysteresis plus mounting the sensor to a fermenter (which I am
planning to make possible). When the 60 year old Bosch with its original
mechanical thermostat has a fermenter in there it cycles about once per
hour during the hot summer, less at night.
Okay, I was informed guessing. As I said, I used to work in a lab, and what
I outlined was Standard Procedure for incubation chambers and the
refridgerator. The explanation was that a temperature probe in the thermal
mass of 500 ml of distilled water in an Erlenmyer flask would render a much
more accurate control temp reading than a probe hanging in ambient air.
Based my opinion and brewing habits on that. Many successful brews later .
. . . . hmmmm.
It does provide more accuracy if the sensor is otherwise mounted in the
wrong position or in the open. It needs to be on a substantial cooled
mass and in well-designed fridges it is. Such as in the one I've got
now. So I'll keep the old controller but just for temperature reading.
The regulation loop in there is not good so that will be replaced by my
own. Plus that allows me to provide a loose sensor that can be strapped
to the side of a fermenter because that is the temperature that really
matters.

Yesterday we were able to move the beast around the house and into a
utility room with three people. Even such semi-commercial units are way
heavier than consumer grade. And my back didn't hurt this morning. Whew.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-17 01:45:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
. . . . . . . . .
Post by Joerg
Post by D Ash
How would it save energy? By not cycling any more than needed.
Think about it. You have a 5 gallon mass of fluid at a certain
temperature. That mass will not fluctuate as often as the mass of
ambient air. Therefore, you do not need to cycle the
cooling/heating elements as often by tracking the nonfluctating
temperature of a smaller amount of fluid. Trust me-- it does work
beautifully!
Fast cycling can also be avoided by a huge lowpass in the controller
or by enough hysteresis plus mounting the sensor to a fermenter
(which I am planning to make possible). When the 60 year old Bosch
with its original mechanical thermostat has a fermenter in there it
cycles about once per hour during the hot summer, less at night.
Okay, I was informed guessing. As I said, I used to work in a lab,
and what I outlined was Standard Procedure for incubation chambers
and the refridgerator. The explanation was that a temperature probe
in the thermal mass of 500 ml of distilled water in an Erlenmyer
flask would render a much more accurate control temp reading than a
probe hanging in ambient air. Based my opinion and brewing habits on
that. Many successful brews later . . . . . hmmmm.
It does provide more accuracy if the sensor is otherwise mounted in
the wrong position or in the open. It needs to be on a substantial
cooled mass and in well-designed fridges it is. Such as in the one
I've got now. So I'll keep the old controller but just for temperature
reading. The regulation loop in there is not good so that will be
replaced by my own. Plus that allows me to provide a loose sensor that
can be strapped to the side of a fermenter because that is the
temperature that really matters.
Yesterday we were able to move the beast around the house and into a
utility room with three people. Even such semi-commercial units are
way heavier than consumer grade. And my back didn't hurt this morning.
Whew.
I've survived the surgery-- L3/L4 fused. My back hurts all the time.
It's why I brew beer.
D Ash
2017-01-12 22:51:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be
able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal
secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me
to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&
Post by Joerg
w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start
up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it
will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that
could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
I just ordered an Inkbird Programmable Outlet Thermostat,1200W, 100~240V
from Amazon for $46.74. Excellent temp range (don'have all the details
at hand right now). I'll be getting a used older model fridge to use as
a brew cabinet, one that has all removeable shelving. That way, I'll be
able to lager at any time. Basement stays below 65F all summer and
doesn't drop below 60, even in the winter when we have temps down into
the teens. This unit ought to be just the ticket!
Joerg
2017-01-12 23:06:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joerg
Post by Joerg
On Monday I bought a Vinotemp VT182 "Wine Cellar" wine fridge. It is a
bit dinged up but it used to be a high-class affair. After removing a
lot of stuff in there and building two sturdy shelves it should be
able to hold two 6.5-gal primary fermenter buckets and two 5-gal
secondary plastic carboys (water cooler bottles). This would allow me
to keep on brewing full tilt during hot summers. Yeehaw!
http://images.hayneedle.com/mgen/imagebywidth.ms?
img=master:VNT027.jpg&
Post by Joerg
w=500&minh=300&maxh=500
The electronic controller is fritzed in that it won't reliably start
up the compressor. I am sure I can fix that somehow. However ...
The temp range adjustment is 48F-65F. 65F seems low and I had my
"rigged" old Bosch fridge running at 67F-68F last summer. Midwest
usually suggests 65F as a minimum for their recipe kits while
Fermentis lists much lower minimums for the yeast that is used with
those kits (like BE-256 and US-05). The fridge has another flaw in
that by design the controller contains no non-volatile memory and it
will default to 55F after even a brief power outage. Not sure if that
could ruin my beers if I don't catch it for a few days.
What do thee say? Try to repair the old controller or hack it and
build something that can go higher in temperature?
Of course, for next winter I'll also build a load resistor box that I
can drop in there as a heater. Though that will be driven externally
with a separate regulator and safely run with low voltage. This would
save us pellet fuel because right now I am often heating that basement
room just so the fermenters are happy.
I just ordered an Inkbird Programmable Outlet Thermostat,1200W, 100~240V
from Amazon for $46.74. Excellent temp range (don'have all the details
at hand right now). I'll be getting a used older model fridge to use as
a brew cabinet, one that has all removeable shelving. That way, I'll be
able to lager at any time. Basement stays below 65F all summer and
doesn't drop below 60, even in the winter when we have temps down into
the teens. This unit ought to be just the ticket!
This is the one I have to control a Bosch fridge from 1956:

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00V4TJR00

The Bosch runs on 230V and this controller is wide-range so that came in
handy. Has only one outlet so you have to select heat or cool mode but
that is usually all one needs. I am using a British to German Schuko
adapter with it. For the wine cooler I'll build something more fancy though.

Working in the garage right now cutting thick wood panels. Lots of dust,
cough, cough. I've got slick blue formica on that which should make it
easy to slide fermenters in and out. Now I'll have to make some anchors
so the shelves won't bang into the heat exchanger plus some cross
bracing to fermenters don't bang into them either.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
D Ash
2017-01-13 14:20:22 UTC
Permalink
Joerg <***@analogconsultants.com> wrote in news:edqgfbF860oU1
@mid.individual.net:

More info and URL for comparison purposes:

Inkbird Programmable Outlet Thermostat,1200W

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01A6UZQX4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?
ie=UTF8&psc=1

Description:
Programmable, 6 temperatures in 6 periods of time;
Plug and play design, easy to use; User calibration;
Dual relays, heating and cooling outputs; Delay protection of refrigeration
control;
F / C temperature display; Can set high and low temperature alarms;
Easy to set, PV and SV dual display windows; Alarm when over-temperature
and sensor error;
Joerg
2017-01-14 16:27:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by D Ash
Inkbird Programmable Outlet Thermostat,1200W
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01A6UZQX4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?
ie=UTF8&psc=1
Programmable, 6 temperatures in 6 periods of time;
Plug and play design, easy to use; User calibration;
Dual relays, heating and cooling outputs; Delay protection of refrigeration
control;
F / C temperature display; Can set high and low temperature alarms;
Easy to set, PV and SV dual display windows; Alarm when over-temperature
and sensor error;
That's the luxury version. A brewmeister in Folsom has one like that.
However, for me that's too much. All I need is one outlet and not
programmability. Just a thermostat that wont forget its settings after a
power outage.

In the "new" brew fridge I will replace the digital controller with my
own analog one, with a multi-turn potentiometer so I can dial in
temperatures with good precision.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/
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