Thirsty Boy wrote:Its funny how different people work this in different ways.
I think exactly the opposite to Lonnie on this one, I want my temperature probe a close as possible to the point where the returning wort hits the mash tun wort. Which ipso facto, is as far as possible from the heat source. I want to know the temp of what is hitting my mash tun and could care less what the temp is when it exits the heat-exchanger (rims unit in my case) I have my probe attached to the outside of the copper return manifold, a few inches above the wort level in the mash tun.
For me the main reason for this is to remove the effect of ambient temperature and heat loss from hoses/lines between the heat exchanger and the tun.
Perhaps little different in a RIMS than a HERMS - and different in different types of HERMS systems too I imagine.
Actually the wort that is "farthest from the heat source" is the wort that is just about to go INTO the heat exchanger - just like the coldest time of night is JUST before sunrise - not the point equistant from sunset to sunrise. However, I think the best we can hope for in this application is the average mash temp. That really should be a probe right in the middle of the mash. If that is unpractical (especially if you do both 5 and 10G batches like I do) - then I think the best compromise is to put it where Thirsty Boy does (if he sets it for a little higher than his desired mash temp), or where Lonnie does it (and sets it for a little lower than his desired mash temp).
Mylo



