I have been thinking about adding a flow meter inline between the carb stones on my tanks and the CO2 line, mostly for the purpose of having a more consistent flow rate of CO2 and having a better ability to dial in very low flow rates for gentler carbonation. It's not always practical to calculate the line length, carb stone breaking pressure, beer osmotic pressure, and tank pressure, so my brewers end up adjusting CO2 inlet pressure using "the force" (listening, feeling, then taking regular zahm readings). Is anyone out there using a simple flow meter to improve consistency in force carbonation? If so, I'd appreciate any feedback or recommendations on appropriate flow meter L/min ranges. FYI - most of our tank are 30bbls.
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using a CO2 flow meter for more consistent carbonation
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using a CO2 flow meter for more consistent carbonation
Kevin Drake
Alibi Ale Works
North Lake Tahoe -
rotameter
Originally posted by thedrake View PostI have been thinking about adding a flow meter inline between the carb stones on my tanks and the CO2 line, mostly for the purpose of having a more consistent flow rate of CO2 and having a better ability to dial in very low flow rates for gentler carbonation. It's not always practical to calculate the line length, carb stone breaking pressure, beer osmotic pressure, and tank pressure, so my brewers end up adjusting CO2 inlet pressure using "the force" (listening, feeling, then taking regular zahm readings). Is anyone out there using a simple flow meter to improve consistency in force carbonation? If so, I'd appreciate any feedback or recommendations on appropriate flow meter L/min ranges. FYI - most of our tank are 30bbls.
i got them from Omega:
FL4000 OEM-style acrylic flow meters are machined from solid acrylic blocks for superb durability. They are designed for front-panel mounting. Click here
Figure out your flow rate range in SCFM to select the right size.
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Visi-Float® Acrylic Flowmeter is a clear acrylic body flowmeters suitable for both gas and liquid applications. A few applications are medical equipment, air samplers, gas analyzers, and chemical injectors.
This is what we use and it works very well, we just make sure its shut before turning on the co2 and slowly opening it to avoid pancaking the float.
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That's not really applicable...
Rotameters are built for a particular gas--most often NOT CO2. There are charts/equations to equate one gas flow rate to another. Rotameters are also built for a certain temperature. Again, there are charts/equations to correlate one temperature to another. And then rotameters are built for a certain pressure. And there are yet other equations/charts to correlate differing pressures. What I'm getting at is that it doesn't much matter. Use the numbers on the rotameter as a guide for reproducibility, not as a quantitative measurement. You could use careful Zahm measurements before and after a certain time at a certain flow rate to compensate for all factors at once. You know you've hit your limit of injection when the head pressure goes up without saturating the liquid. That indicates blowing the CO2 through the liquid, as opposed to dissolving the gas into solution.Phillip Kelm--Palau Brewing Company Manager--
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Originally posted by gitchegumee View PostRotameters are built for a particular gas--most often NOT CO2. There are charts/equations to equate one gas flow rate to another. Rotameters are also built for a certain temperature. Again, there are charts/equations to correlate one temperature to another. And then rotameters are built for a certain pressure. And there are yet other equations/charts to correlate differing pressures. What I'm getting at is that it doesn't much matter. Use the numbers on the rotameter as a guide for reproducibility, not as a quantitative measurement. You could use careful Zahm measurements before and after a certain time at a certain flow rate to compensate for all factors at once. You know you've hit your limit of injection when the head pressure goes up without saturating the liquid. That indicates blowing the CO2 through the liquid, as opposed to dissolving the gas into solution.Kevin Drake
Alibi Ale Works
North Lake Tahoe
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Originally posted by mgustafson View Posthttp://www.dwyer-inst.com/market/WEA...eArea/SeriesVF
This is what we use and it works very well, we just make sure its shut before turning on the co2 and slowly opening it to avoid pancaking the float.
Thanks,
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Originally posted by MikeyB View Post1-10 scfm is right where you want to be, for a small, 30bbl-ish-and-under tank.
Thanks,Last edited by StrayDogBrewing; 10-02-2019, 03:44 PM.
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