General Category > Equipment and Software
Small fridge for temp control?
kgs:
I'm reopening my temp-control project, focusing on small-to-medium fridges. (Chest freezers are out -- I don't want to lift items in or out, and I don't have room in my apartment office for a pulley.) I ferment my beer in 5-gallon buckets or Better Bottles.
Has anyone done this recently? Costco has a freezerless model that looks promising -- http://www.costco.com/Urban-Islands-Refrigerator.product.11614942.html . I'm thinking there will be sales right before and Christmas that I could pounce on, especially since I'm off next week.
anje:
Hmm, that one does look promising.
I keep eying the mini-fridges that keep appearing on Craigslist (university town, so we have considerably more of those than full-size units listed), but they tend to have a compressor taking out a nice chunk at the bottom and are usually too short for a fermenter with an airlock above that point.
Probably obvious, but if you can go to the store, bring along an empty fermenter WITH an airlock (assuming you use one) to see if it fits.
kgs:
Yes, traveling with an empty fermenter plus airlock has become my fridge-shopping MO. You are right about the compressor. The freezerless model has one, but because it doesn't have a freezer, it has more height. In theory it will do fine with my fermenters, but I try on clothes before I buy them, too.
The other thing I am doing is watching the sales ads like a hawk for a wine fridge.
1 atm Brewing:
I had trouble finding a fridge that didn't have the compressor in the back bottom corner, they are very common now. I finally decided to buy one of them and find a way to make it work. I bought a 4.4 cu. ft. Magic Chef off of Craigslist. My 7-gallon plastic fermentor fits well vertically in the fridge. There's room for the fermentor & bubble cap plus a few inches. I also brought my fermentor for a fit-check before buying.
I tossed out all of the shelving including the small freezer door. Even though I'll likely never control the fridge to lower than 60F I didn't want the freezer frosting up. The drink racks on the door came off very easily. It's just a plastic shell held on with small Phillips-head screws. The sealing gasket on the perimeter of the door didn't seat well without the door shelving so I glued it back onto the door.
Now the door almost closes, it stops about an inch from fully closed. However since my bucket fermentor has a slight outward taper, there really is enough depth at the base of the fermentor. The interference is at the top where the lid is wider. Right now I just push the door closed and hold it shut with a luggage strap. The fermentor is canted at a small angle when the door is closed but I don't think that has much effect on the fermentation. Next I'm going to try removing a strip of insulation on the door near the lid to free up a little more space for the door to close. I'm also considering cutting a hole in the side of the fridge to run a blow-off tube through when needed.
yugamrap:
I was given a small-ish fridge that has a freezer unit in it. It had enough vertical clearance to ferment in a 7.9-gallon bucket or a 6-gallon carboy - but it wasn't deep enough so the door wouldn't close all the way. I I removed the door liner that had the shelves on it, but that was still not enough. So, I removed the entire door assembly and built a wooden "collar" out of 2x10 that extended the depth of the fridge and re-mounted the door. Then I put the whole works on an inexpensive furniture dolly to help support the collar and make it easy to move around. It doesn't get cold enough for lagering (I have another fridge for that) but it will ferment a 6-gallon batch of lager or ale just fine.
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