Tower Chilling

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Jimmy
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Tower Chilling

Post by Jimmy » Fri Mar 23, 2012 7:54 pm

I'm planning on installing my beer tower this weekend and wondering what you guys do to chill your towers? I'm looking for something easy...not looking to engineer some crazy electrical unit..

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by BrooklandBrewer » Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:16 pm

I believe you can get a cooling fan for a cheap price on eBay. Just point it upwards toward the tower. Should do the trick. Other than that I don't have any super "cool"ing ideas. :cheers2:
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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by Jimmy » Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:20 pm

I've seen that, but wondered about it constantly running. I'm guessing the power consumption wouldn't be very significant?

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by mr x » Sat Mar 24, 2012 8:24 am

Those fans will use essentially no power compared to the compressor power that will be used to cool the tower.
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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by GillettBreweryCnslt » Sun Mar 25, 2012 6:23 am

This might be going a bit too far, but you could wire it into the power for the compressor. Then it'll only turn on when the compression turns on.

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by Timothy Doane » Sun Mar 25, 2012 9:39 am

I have the True TDD-1 with a built in fan and hose to cool the tower - it certainly does the trick but it runs 24/7 and there is a noise factor that I (and family) had to get used to - it's not that bad!

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by bluenose » Sun Mar 25, 2012 9:47 am

if your line from the chamber isn't too long, then you don't need to cool you tower...

however I had an idea to fill a line with glycol (the blue stuff in cooler packs), and wrap it and the beer line in some of the grey pipe insulators. Then I would let them both go down into the cooling chamber... not sure if the heat/cold would transfer on its own, otherwise you would need a way to recirculate the glycol and I'm not sure how aquarium pumps rate on noise and power consumption.
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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by mr x » Sun Mar 25, 2012 9:58 am

Commercial towers use glycol chilled copper lines. You could probably do this with a tiny aq pump, but I don't think it's a good idea to run it 24/7. Only when you are drinking. Same as fan cooling. I don't see the point to run it 24/7, unless you need that first beer of the day perfect and ready to pour.
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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by OntarioBeerkegs » Sun Mar 25, 2012 10:26 am

Copper tubing is the cheapest way (and the way I use). Run it from the back of the shank into the fridge and bend a length of it where it enters the fridge to attach on the ceiling.

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by Jimmy » Sun Mar 25, 2012 11:17 am

OntarioBeerkegs wrote:Copper tubing is the cheapest way (and the way I use). Run it from the back of the shank into the fridge and bend a length of it where it enters the fridge to attach on the ceiling.
I've seen that online, but it says to use spray foam insulation in the tower. Did you do that with yours?

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by OntarioBeerkegs » Sun Mar 25, 2012 11:39 am

No. I am not a big fan of insulation in towers. This is likely open to debate but I find insulation locks in the warmth and makes it harder to keep cool then if just let cold air in from the bottom. Makes my first pour knock the co2 out of solution until the line gets cold from the heat transfer. Right now with open air and a copper tube the back of my shank is 48F and room temp in the basement is 70F. I have not poured a drink for 8 hours. If someone with insulation only could post what they have would be appreciated.

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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by bluenose » Sun Mar 25, 2012 8:44 pm

so all you're doing is allowing the cold air from the fridge to cool down the copper tube? sounds good to me
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Re: Tower Chilling

Post by Jimmy » Sun Mar 25, 2012 8:46 pm

bluenose wrote:so all you're doing is allowing the cold air from the fridge to cool down the copper tube? sounds good to me
Here's an write up on it

http://brokenglassbrewing.blogspot.ca/2 ... -past.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

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