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You need to figure out controlling your ferm temps, keeping them steady at a set temperature, and not swing 10-20 degrees.
In my early brewing days I had a 5 gallon batch of a 1.096-some Old Ale stall at 1.034, using 2 packs of S-04 yeast. Nothing it did could budge it. Later I figured out it must have been a temp drop, overnight. I didn't use a temp controlled ferm chamber at the time. Lesson learned...
I then started using a large Igloo cooler* (it fits two 6.5 gallon brew bucket side by side). It's filled with just enough water (creating a water jacket), so that the filled brew bucket(s) just don't start to float.
The cooler is placed in my lower level bathroom (that part is underground) and temps are quite constant there around 64-67F year-round. Fermentation is exothermic, generates heat, so I dope the water jacket with 1-4 frozen water bottles once or twice a day, as needed, to keep temps at 65 or 66 degrees. An aquarium heater can keep them at 68-72F if necessary. In addition, the whole setup is wrapped in a sleeping bag or a few moving blankets, again, to help keep temps steady.
* I now use a dedicated, external temp controlled, fridge (or upright freezer) for most fermentations. |
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