Thanks mate, wish I had seen this some time ago. Good instructions. Good beers!
Assembled mill today great video thanks for the information. They need to add instructions
Thank you. I bought a grain mill and it any instructions. Luckily I guessed right
Hi,
Can this mill make fine flour from whole grains like wheat, to make bread from it ?
Thank you
Can this be used to break the Hull on Buckwheat. Then I would filter out the hulls and put buckwheat back in again to make the flour
This mill is designed to crush malted barely for beer brewing and it doesn't have the ability to make flour.
Wet conditioning grain is massively worth doing too
can we make it electric motor driven ? if so how much need to be the power of the motor in KW
Can I roll corn with this mill
This mill is designed for milling malted barley for the brewing process, and I do not know enough about rolling corn to know if you could use this for that process. I have tried to crack corn with it for distilling and the primary gap prevented the corn to pass, and it did not work.
Anthony Boghosian thanks that’s y I’m looking for a small mill for corn distillate. Cheers man
@@1336kingsville Thanks, you may want to look into our two roller mill. I believe that since the two-roller gap is completely adjustable out to .100, you can mill a variety of grains.
www.beveragefactory.com/homebrew/pre-fermentation-equipment/kegco-km7gm-2r-grain-mill.html
I would be willing to test this for you, if you would like to send a description of the corn that you are using and your process, I have both of our mills that I use for home brewing. Email me at anthony@beveragefactory.com
@@anthonyboghosian8500 hi Mr. Do you think this mill can be use to make peanut butter? I would appreciate your answer
why not conncting another type of devise that turn the roll instead of drill
You can attach a bicycle if you want so the missus can exercise and grind at the same time.
This video is anything but professional advice. A cordless drill is a very poor drive to a grain mill, as it has an RPM that is far too high to produce wort of high efficiency. You need about 200 rpm. What I saw in the video was way higher than that.
Hello Paul, Thanks for your comment. I have heard this before but did not notice a significant difference in the speed differences between a drill on low and the mill motors that we sell. I agree that a high torque low RPM motor would be better, but we felt that a hand drill is much more accessible for the common home brewer.
That wrench cringe lol
The one I bought had no instructions so this was helpful and peculiar all at once.