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In order to diagnose efficiency problems, the following data is needed:
Grain bill detailsStrike water volume (actually all water added before end of mash)Sparge water volumeSparge process (fly, batch, or none, and if batch, how many sparge steps)SG of wort at end of mash, prior to run-off (should be after thorough stirring or thorough vorlauf)Pre-boil volume and SG (after thorough mixing of initial and sparge wort)Post-boil volume and SG (i.e. OG)Volume to fermenterWith this data it is possible to determine conversion efficiency (how well the mash worked), lauter efficiency (how well you separated sugar formed from the grain), mash efficiency (conversion efficiency * lauter efficiency), and brewhouse efficiency (which is less interesting than mash efficiency, since it is just mash efficiency * fermenter volume / post-boil volume.)
Conversion efficiency is primarily determined by crush fineness, mash time, and to a lesser extent by mash pH. Lauter efficiency is primarily determined by sparge process and grain absorption rate. Brewhouse is determined by the previous two, plus how much wort you leave behind going from BK to fermenter.
Measurement accuracy is critical, as the calculated efficiency can be no more accurate than the worst measurement that goes into the calculation. Volumes must be measured volumes, not target volumes, and should be measured to an accuracy of 0.1 gal (for a 5 gal batch.)
Without the above data, anything said about poor efficiency is just speculation.
Brew on
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