Juntou-se 2021-05-20
profile picture

Matt H

@Matt

Estados Unidos

Perfis Públicos

NOME DO PERFIL ORIGEM PROCESSO TAMANHO DO LOTE TAMANHO DA MÁQUINA TEMPO DE TORRA GOTA TEMP
FASE SECA FASE INTERMEDIÁRIA FASE DE DESENVOLVIMENTO ORGANIZAÇÃO DATA DE TORRA
4:12 / 47% 3:40 / 39% 1:21 / 14% Ganders Coffee 2022-12-08 UTC
Vista
FASE SECA FASE INTERMEDIÁRIA FASE DE DESENVOLVIMENTO ORGANIZAÇÃO DATA DE TORRA
4:18 / 43% 3:50 / 38% 1:57 / 19% Ganders Coffee 2022-12-08 UTC
Vista
FASE SECA FASE INTERMEDIÁRIA FASE DE DESENVOLVIMENTO ORGANIZAÇÃO DATA DE TORRA
4:21 / 45% 3:59 / 40% 1:30 / 15% Ganders Coffee 2022-12-08 UTC
Vista
FASE SECA FASE INTERMEDIÁRIA FASE DE DESENVOLVIMENTO ORGANIZAÇÃO DATA DE TORRA
4:22 / 44% 3:54 / 38% 1:52 / 18% Ganders Coffee 2022-12-08 UTC
Vista
Perfis ocultos
\

Realizações

1000 Lotes

2024-05-01

Raia de três dias

2024-05-01

1º Aniversário

2024-04-22

Coruja da Noite

2024-04-22

Guerreiro de fim de semana

2024-04-22

Público Cativo

2024-04-22

100 Kg

2024-04-22

50 Kg

2024-04-22

100 Horas

2024-04-22

24 Horas

2024-04-22

150 Dias

2024-04-22

30 Dias

2024-04-22

500 Lotes

2024-04-22

100 Lotes

2024-04-17

Café V

2024-04-11

Café II

2024-04-11
Conquistas ocultas

Atividade

2023-06-02 23:56 UTC

Postar: PID on 1kg reflecting significantly lower temperature?

Odd thing I've run into when heating my machine, and when charging a roast:

  • My BT probe will read around 400º
  • My ET probe will read around 400º
  • Yet the PID on the machine will read around 300º-310º

Is this normal, or is there some kind of discrepancy here that needs to be corrected? I found this issue when looking at roast logs from the roast-along videos. The BT at the beginning of those roasts reflects a temperature that's around 400º. I typically charge my roasts at around 390-400 PID, which in turn reflects 480º-515º BT on roast path. My roasts are, on average, between 7:30 and 9:30. Any thoughts?

Bruno

2

Comentários

0

Gosta

870

Modos de exibição
2022-12-13 16:43 UTC

@Matt

Comentou o post da @Matt Airflow During Soak

Thanks for the info, Steve

2022-12-09 16:18 UTC

Postar: Airflow During Soak

This past year, I've found myself using a few different fan settings during soak (1kg). What I've seen from other roasters online is that some will use their low air setting, some will begin with an even lower air setting, and a few will kill the fan entirely during soak. Recently, I find myself leaning toward a low to no air approach during the soak. When cupping, I find less astringency and a higher quality acidity in these coffees. Anyone else experience this?

My thinking is that leaving the fan on during soak could bring cooler air into the drum which:

1. Cools the drum quicker than it otherwise would without added airflow and

2. Makes it more difficult for the seeds to take on heat from the drum, stunting early momentum in the roast

On the flip, I realize that some airflow during soak could pull residual heat through the drum and, subsequently, the beans, creating early momentum. And so I suppose my question is how much air is too much air during soak? Or would it be beneficial to cut airflow altogether at this time?

If you perform a soak, what are your airflow settings?

Matt sgreen

3

Comentários

2

Gosta

1401

Modos de exibição
2023-06-02 23:56 UTC

Postar: PID on 1kg reflecting significantly lower temperature?

Odd thing I've run into when heating my machine, and when charging a roast:

  • My BT probe will read around 400º
  • My ET probe will read around 400º
  • Yet the PID on the machine will read around 300º-310º

Is this normal, or is there some kind of discrepancy here that needs to be corrected? I found this issue when looking at roast logs from the roast-along videos. The BT at the beginning of those roasts reflects a temperature that's around 400º. I typically charge my roasts at around 390-400 PID, which in turn reflects 480º-515º BT on roast path. My roasts are, on average, between 7:30 and 9:30. Any thoughts?

Bruno

2

Comentários

0

Gosta

870

Modos de exibição
2022-12-09 16:18 UTC

Postar: Airflow During Soak

This past year, I've found myself using a few different fan settings during soak (1kg). What I've seen from other roasters online is that some will use their low air setting, some will begin with an even lower air setting, and a few will kill the fan entirely during soak. Recently, I find myself leaning toward a low to no air approach during the soak. When cupping, I find less astringency and a higher quality acidity in these coffees. Anyone else experience this?

My thinking is that leaving the fan on during soak could bring cooler air into the drum which:

1. Cools the drum quicker than it otherwise would without added airflow and

2. Makes it more difficult for the seeds to take on heat from the drum, stunting early momentum in the roast

On the flip, I realize that some airflow during soak could pull residual heat through the drum and, subsequently, the beans, creating early momentum. And so I suppose my question is how much air is too much air during soak? Or would it be beneficial to cut airflow altogether at this time?

If you perform a soak, what are your airflow settings?

Matt sgreen

3

Comentários

2

Gosta

1401

Modos de exibição
2022-12-06 02:41 UTC

Postar: Is there a specific location to input weight loss?

This would be helpful not only for roasting, but accounting for loss as well.

Matt cdurdan

3

Comentários

0

Gosta

1331

Modos de exibição
2022-12-13 16:43 UTC

@Matt

Comentou o post da @Matt Airflow During Soak

Thanks for the info, Steve

2022-12-09 15:02 UTC

Thanks, Cole!

Atividade escondida