Turbo 500 (T500) great for 'vodka'
Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2023 7:26 pm
In the face of much disdain and ridicule on certain forums, I'd like to share my experience for those considering this still.
I bought my T500 5 years ago because I was in a particularly bad place with ongoing depression (second divorce – you'd think I'd learn first time...) and couldn't afford to drink as much as I wanted at the time. I just wanted cheap and fast escape from my problems (it didn't work and only made things worse what a surprise) so I blindly followed the manufacturer's instructions with turbo yeast, two-part flocullent, diligently thoroughly shook both copper and stainless saddles in place, distilled at 55-65C (tried to keep it at 60C), and put it through a four litre SS column carbon filter.
I distilled straight into a 4L carboy (what are cuts?) and regularly got 3.5 – 3.8L of 95% @30C. My alcometer temperature adjustment scale only goes up to 90%ABV and for 30C the adjustment drops the higher the ABV. At 80% it's -3.1% and at 90% it's -2.7% so at 95% I'm guessing the adjustment would be even less than -2.7%, so at least 92%.
Diluted it 1:1 with water, wacked it in the column filter, set it to two drops per second as per manufacturer's specs, and it came out 45% (adjusted). I thought it was a bit rough, so put it through again. Very drinkable, and anyone who tried it was impressed.
After that brew the only change I made to the process was letting the 50/50 (always 95% @ 30C) diluted mix sit in the column for at least four hours or overnight and set the ball valve to 1 drop per second . This flow rate was near impossible with the ridiculously short tap handle so I lengthened it by unrolling the rolled sheet tap handle and epoxying in a 3” nail, then using a foot long by half inch piece of 9-ply as a hammer to gently tap the end of the nail. This was still frustrating as a slightly harder tap would change the flow too much. I finally worked out it was better to hammer with the same force, but shorten or lengthen my grip on the ply (duh...)
The problem here was that even after a whole 750ml (I thinks that's 'a fifth') of my 45% 'vodka' I had no hangover so there was no dis-incentive not to drink! (thankfully I saw the stupidity of my coping mechanism and brought the black dog to heel)
The point is, if you want pretty easy making quite nice 'vodka' with no hangover that you can afford to generously shout your mates, the Turbo 500 is an excellent choice in my opinion (as well as everyone else who's tried my 'vodka' so far)
Now I'm trying to avoid 'crap in, crap out' by giving my still the cleanest wash possible, as well as avoiding buying carbon and the 5-6 days it takes for the 8-8.75L of 40% (80 proof now – easier to keep track for driving) to filter at one drop per second but that's a whole other journey...
I bought my T500 5 years ago because I was in a particularly bad place with ongoing depression (second divorce – you'd think I'd learn first time...) and couldn't afford to drink as much as I wanted at the time. I just wanted cheap and fast escape from my problems (it didn't work and only made things worse what a surprise) so I blindly followed the manufacturer's instructions with turbo yeast, two-part flocullent, diligently thoroughly shook both copper and stainless saddles in place, distilled at 55-65C (tried to keep it at 60C), and put it through a four litre SS column carbon filter.
I distilled straight into a 4L carboy (what are cuts?) and regularly got 3.5 – 3.8L of 95% @30C. My alcometer temperature adjustment scale only goes up to 90%ABV and for 30C the adjustment drops the higher the ABV. At 80% it's -3.1% and at 90% it's -2.7% so at 95% I'm guessing the adjustment would be even less than -2.7%, so at least 92%.
Diluted it 1:1 with water, wacked it in the column filter, set it to two drops per second as per manufacturer's specs, and it came out 45% (adjusted). I thought it was a bit rough, so put it through again. Very drinkable, and anyone who tried it was impressed.
After that brew the only change I made to the process was letting the 50/50 (always 95% @ 30C) diluted mix sit in the column for at least four hours or overnight and set the ball valve to 1 drop per second . This flow rate was near impossible with the ridiculously short tap handle so I lengthened it by unrolling the rolled sheet tap handle and epoxying in a 3” nail, then using a foot long by half inch piece of 9-ply as a hammer to gently tap the end of the nail. This was still frustrating as a slightly harder tap would change the flow too much. I finally worked out it was better to hammer with the same force, but shorten or lengthen my grip on the ply (duh...)
The problem here was that even after a whole 750ml (I thinks that's 'a fifth') of my 45% 'vodka' I had no hangover so there was no dis-incentive not to drink! (thankfully I saw the stupidity of my coping mechanism and brought the black dog to heel)
The point is, if you want pretty easy making quite nice 'vodka' with no hangover that you can afford to generously shout your mates, the Turbo 500 is an excellent choice in my opinion (as well as everyone else who's tried my 'vodka' so far)
Now I'm trying to avoid 'crap in, crap out' by giving my still the cleanest wash possible, as well as avoiding buying carbon and the 5-6 days it takes for the 8-8.75L of 40% (80 proof now – easier to keep track for driving) to filter at one drop per second but that's a whole other journey...