Considering pulling the trigger on the Barley Crusher tonight and have read that it’s good practice to run some throw away grains through to get rid of any machine oil.
True? If so, should I just use some 2 Row? How much?
Cheers!
Considering pulling the trigger on the Barley Crusher tonight and have read that it’s good practice to run some throw away grains through to get rid of any machine oil.
True? If so, should I just use some 2 Row? How much?
Cheers!
1-2 lbs of two row will be fine.
If I were you, I would re-think that decision. The Barley Crusher is a second-tier mill from a build quality point of view. If money is tight, your funds would be better spent on a Schmidling (JSP) Model P Malt Mill. I know do not know a single brewer is who was ever sorry that he/she purchased a JSP mill.
Don’t really have budget concerns. What do you like outside of the JSP?
I just replaced my Barley Crusher with a Monster Mill. It’s got bigger rollers, a bigger hopper and its easier to clean and adjust. My Barley Crusher has the very common problem of the free roller not spinning anymore. I’ve taken it apart and cleaned it a couple of times and the problem recurs after a batch or two. If you search some forums, you’ll see this happens a lot
I love my mm2. PIA to build, but awesome otherwise. Get a 1/2" variable speed drill to power whatever. Electric, not battery. 3/8" works ok, but the torque is insufficient at low speeds.
I have a Barley Crusher. Like others, after while (~1,000 pounds of malt in my case) the idler roller stops turning because the knurling on the rollers is worn and won’t consistently grab the malt. To the manuf’s credit, it does have a life time warranty and they did take it back, replace the rollers and return it to me. It takes about 4 weeks from the time you ship it until you get it back.
I’m guessing that the same problem will reoccur after I put another 1,000 pounds through the mill. For me that will be about 3 years from now.
At that point I don’t know if I’ll get it rebuilt again or just replace it with something else. Cross that bridge when I get there.
Considering I’m not brewing very often, don’t mind a hand crank, and want something I can just stick on a bucket I may stick w this for now.
This thread has obviously changed! As I’m thinking more about this, I may just continue to order crushed grain. The price is the same unless I buy in bulk. If I plan to use right away I don’t see any harm.
My experience exactly.
The BC does a great job for years at the rate I brew. $15 in shipping every 3-6 years seems like a minimal cost of doing business.
You maybe correct on buying crushed grains if you don’t brew enough to “pay for” your mill in a year or two by buying in bulk. If you are happy with the beer you produce and your efficiency or your brewing pace picks up you can always get a mill at that time.
Paul
just keep in mind. they crush = you get whatever crush they provide. i did that as welll when i started, but moved very soon into crushing my own.
if you do pull the trigger, i think the advice here is solid on mills. hand cranking is fun…once or twice. putting 12+ lbs and cranking by hand get olds pretty quick. mine works well with cordless dewalt with variable speed- but its kind of high end.
I didn’t even think about break-in remove any machine oils…
Oh well, what’s done is done. It’s certainly broken in now!
To answer the original question, I ran two pounds of the cheapest grain available at the shop.
One pro-tip - Load a little bit at a time so you can examine the crush and adjust if you notice large whole grains getting trough.
Neither of my Schmidling Malt Mllls have been motorized. I hand cranked almost two tons of malt through my original Malt Mill before selling it when I left the hobby for a few years.
As I have mentioned before, I currently own a Schmidling (JSP) Model P Malt Mill and a 3-roller Monster Mill. Of the two, the JSP mill is better built. What the JSP design lacks in bling, it more than makes up in manufacturing tolerances. There’s less side-to-side play in the rollers. One does not have to do the alignment dance while setting up a JSP Malt Mill. The axle to bushing interface is also tighter tolerance. The first thing to go out on a cheaper mill is the knurl on the rollers, as Barley Crusher owners eventually learn. The second thing to go is usually the bushings (or bearings). It is not unusual to see twenty-year-old JSP Malt Mills still in use at home brew stores.
I got a Barley Crusher, be gentle… :o
I have a MM3, so I can’t say anything about the BC. If it crushes your grain, you did good!
+1
This sturdiness and longevity is why I recently, after thinking about it and weighing all the variables, went with the JSP MaltMill.
I haven’t had it long enough to personally verify its virtues, like S Cervisiae, but I’ve also seen them last over the years at the home brew stores. Though, I can see the sturdiness in just the short time that I’ve had it.
I wonder if powering a mill with a drill causes more wear and tear on the rollers than hand cranking.
I’ve had a Barley Crusher for over 7 years, and I’ve probably put somewhere around 1,500 lbs. of grain through it (almost all of it with the hand crank).
I’ve experienced a stuck roller once or twice, but it wasn’t anything that a bit of cleaning didn’t fix, and the knurl on the rollers is still very much intact.
The JSP and Monster Mills look pretty nice though. If/when my Barley Crusher dies, I’ll probably give one of those a try.
I wonder if powering a mill with a drill causes more wear and tear on the rollers than hand cranking.
I’ve had a Barley Crusher for over 7 years, and I’ve probably put somewhere around 1,500 lbs. of grain through it (almost all of it with the hand crank).
I’ve experienced a stuck roller once or twice, but it wasn’t anything that a bit of cleaning didn’t fix, and the knurl on the rollers is still very much intact.
The JSP and Monster Mills look pretty nice though. If/when my Barley Crusher dies, I’ll probably give one of those a try.
Man, 1,500 lbs. of grain with the hand crank…you must have Popeye forearms.
I got a Barley Crusher, be gentle… :o
You’re not the first, and you won’t be the last! It will get the job done.