boil-off

Minbari

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just wondering what other people get for water boil off on thier setups. mine is always about 1.5-2 gallons an hour. just seems high.

if you can specify the size of your boil pot, will give a better comparison.
 
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1.25 gallons an hour typically
 
Mine is usually around 3/4 gallon per hour.

ETA my kettle is 5.5 gallons
 
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2/3 gallon
————-
Hour
 
4 gallon pot loses 1/2 a gallon in an hour
 
About right...relative humidity seems to seems to make a difference even at only 500' above sea level. 50% took an additional quart out...1.75 g per hour.
 
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About right...relative humidity seems to seems to make a difference ever at only 500' above sea level. 50% took an additional quart out...1.75 g per hour.
I am at 700' I believe. I also use an exhaust hood to keep the walls from dripping.
 
just wondering what other people get for water boil off on thier setups. mine is always about 1.5-2 gallons an hour. just seems high.

if you can specify the size of your boil pot, will give a better comparison.
11 gallon pot, I get about 1 gph/3.8 lph, depending on the size of the batch and the wattage I use.
 
Mine is very low. Burner is a bit small.
Less than litre per hour.
Stovetop, 10 litre pot with 7.5 litre water
 
My batch size id 7.5 gal (in a 10 gal BK) and boil boil-off about 1.25 gal/hour. The boil-off is a bit more on windy days. Could your exhaust fan be causing extra evaporation? Also how vigorous is your boil? You only need a good rolling boil.
 
My batch size id 7.5 gal (in a 10 gal BK) and boil boil-off about 1.25 gal/hour. The boil-off is a bit more on windy days. Could your exhaust fan be causing extra evaporation? Also how vigorous is your boil? You only need a good rolling boil.
The hood could very well be contributing to it.
I have 4500W of heat. Its a pretty solid boil.
 
With the brewzilla (1500watt), it's around 1.25 gallons. Stove top small batch around .75 gallons. I can control the boil better on the gas stove top.
 
Boil off rate is primarily dependent on wattage or BTU of the heat source.

It takes 2731 watt-hours to evaporate a gallon of water at 212F. So if you have a 1600 watt heat source, the maximum possible boil off rate is 1.71 gallons per hour. However, that assumes a 100% heat transfer efficiency. In my experience with a 1600 watt vessel, I get a boil off of around 1.5 gallons per hour. This would be a thermal efficiency of about 88% which seems about right.
 

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