We keep the racking arm up until transfer and just burp yeast/hops out of it as needed when we dump off the bottom of the tank. If you want to keep the arm down and are concerned about the bubble, just start with it up while filling the tank, then back down for fermentation. If there is still a bubble later on (and I think there will be), you know that it's CO2 from fermentation that was forced via gravity to collect in the dead leg of the racking arm during fermentation.
I like the idea of cooling in through the racking arm down for the first fill, and then up at an angle for second/subsequent fills to help avoid stratification. We see significant stratification on lagers after the second fill but I guess I just don't worry about it because it eventually mixes. Cant hurt to try getting rid of it from the get go though.
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Sam Tierney
Propagator Brewery Manager
Firestone Walker Brewing Co
Marina del Rey CA
(805) 835-4459
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Original Message:
Sent: 07-19-2023 12:47
From: Travis Kocurek
Subject: Racking Arm Position
Hello,
In the constant pursuit of quality improvement, I have noticed something about fermentor racking arm orientation during fermentation and would like to solicit outside opinions. I'll explain, and then ask the question.
Our SOP is to orient the racking arm slightly downward (in a 4-5 o'clock position) before filling the fermentor. From there, fermentation and cold conditioning proceeds as you'd normally expect. When it comes time to fine the finished beer, we will turn the racking arm upward so we are able to do a few brief bursts with CO2 through the racking arm in order to homogenize the fining agent in the beer. When rotating the racking arm upward from the 4-5 o' clock position, we will get a good bit of burping or bubbling due to a void that exists inside the racking arm since filling the fermentor (imagine holding a cup upside down and submerging it in a liquid, where a void exists inside the cup when the cup is submerged. You tilt the cup, and the void fills with the liquid, displacing the gas inside).
With this in mind, here is my question: Is it possible that we are oxidizing the finished beer when rotating the racking arm upward, as we are filling that void inside the racking arm with beer? Conversely, recognizing that the void in the racking arm would contain some amount of O2 at the start of fermentation, would the yeast consume the oxygen in the void, leaving only CO2 to subsequently escape when we rotate the racking arm upward at that fining step? Obviously, there is an interface between fermenting beer and the void in the racking arm, so perhaps the O2 in the arm is consumed during fermentation, and so when we rotate the racking arm as described above, we are only displacing CO2. We have our reasons for leaving the racking arm oriented the way we do prior to fermentation, but if this is causing us to subsequently oxidize the finished beer when we rotate the arm, we must consider modifying our SOP!
Thank you kindly for any insight.
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Travis Kocurek
Brewer/Owner
Hound Song Brewing Co.
Columbus, TX
979-942-7199
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