All metal pieces are bonded together, I checked continuity with a multi-meter. I then spray painted it with Plasti-Dip to repel water. The switch controls the march pump, and the outlet is so I can plug a pond pump into it and push ice cold water through the chiller. I brew outside and plug the setup into a GFCI outlet, otherwise the outlet on my chiller rig would be a GFCI receptacle.
I tested it tonight with boiling water, and was truly impressed. It may not look as good, but the cost was no where close to the competition. I did not put the aeration port into mine, no biggie in my opinion.
I will see what I can do. It was pretty easy actually. The frame is uni-strut, plate-chiller and the entire wort-out fitting assembly came from homebrewtuff.com. I went to Home Depot and bought the fittings and had them cut the plywood base. I will try to make a build list in the next day or so if I find some time.
This should be the complete list, hopefully I didn’t forget anything. I am switching to quick-disconnect fittings to make cleaning/back-flushing easier. Sorry the build list doesn’t come out organized. It looks organized when I type it, but gets all jacked up when I post it.
Home Brew Stuff (www.homebrewstuff.com)
40 plate wort chiller-$125.99
809-HS March pump-$149.99
Ther-monitor assembly (whole assembly on wort-out side)-$69.99
Home Depot (prices are approximate, and probably higher since this is priced in Hawaii.)
QTY Item Price
1 Uni-strut $16
2 Nylon cone nuts 5 pack $3.15 ea
4 1/2" 3 hole flat corner bracket $2.75 ea
2 1/2” 2 hole 90° angle bracket $1.97 ea
1 8 ½” X 11” plywood $6
4 bolts, washers, nuts for plywood free (had on hand)
1 aerosol can of Plasti-Dip $5.98
1 teflon tape $1.26
3 WATTS A-390 hose barb $3.42
1 8’ft grounded cord $10
1 handy box $1.14
1 switch/receptacle $10
1 black cover plate $0.59
1 garden hose adapter $4
Its hard to tell in the picture, but the pump sits in front of the plate chiller. However, if the lines leak, they would allow liquid to run down the tubing and onto/into the pump. My connections are tight, and I had no issues when I tested it with water. But, I am thinking of adding a thin piece of sheet metal under the chiller and connections to act as a gutter should a leak occur. Also, the switch I added allows for a quick way to shut the pump off should a leak occur.
Thanks! It looks pretty similiar to the Blichmann, except the ports are in different spots, and I think the mounting is a little different. The best part is the price. Saved quite a bit on it.