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Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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Thanks!
You also got me to learn what DE was, and I though I knew about winemaking... "Tom S" > wrote in message om>... > "Raanan" > wrote in message > m... > > I'm trying to build a wine filter using a cartridge filter. I ordered > > a Flojet 2100 diaphragm pump which has 3/8" ports. Now the cartridge > > housing - I can choose b/w 1/4" (smaller) or 1/2" (bigger) - any advice on > > which should I take? also the tubing size - should it match the pump or > the > > housing? > > Assuming you're going for a standard 10 inch housing, that'll take anything > up to 1 inch fittings. > > That pump has 3/8" female pipe threads, and apparently comes with a pair of > ½" hose barb fittings. I'd run ½" hose to and from the filter housing, and > in fact throughout. For couplings you could use plastic garden hose > fittings. > > I'd recommend that you use a 10" housing (with adapters as required) because > the filters are cheap and readily available at hardware stores. Since > that's a diaphragm pump, you could do DE filtrations easily by just dumping > DE* into the wine and keeping it stirred while filtering through a $3 > throwaway paper filter. That avoids the extra expense of depth filtration > media. > > *You should rinse your DE before using it in your wine unless you're sure > that it's free of off odors and flavors. Some brands of DE have > cardboard-like character to them, but will clean up OK with a flushing with > dilute citric acid. Run them with dilute citric followed by clean water > through your filtration setup until the effluent water tastes and smells OK. > Then drain most of the moisture from the DE, dump it into the wine and > you're ready to go. > > If you're going to use a depth cartridge instead of DE you should still run > dilute citric acid through it first. Cartridges tend to have a plastic > smell/flavor at first. You really don't want that to end up in your wine. > > If you want to get _really_ fancy you could put a 0.45µ membrane (in a > separate housing) after the DE filter and do sterile filtration. Then you > could make sweet wines without having to use sorbate, or non-ML wines > without having to worry about corks shooting in the middle of the night. > :^) > > BTW, I've been using DE filtration for ~15 years on my wines. Lately I've > been trying to get away from filtration altogether, but sometimes you don't > have that option. > > Tom S |
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