Northern Brewer G5-ZTOW-TPQD Frantoio per orzo con tramoggia da 7 libbre, (argento) 7 libbre

Brand:Northern Brewer

2.9/5

239.62

Il mulino per cereali a rulli Vintage Shop con tramoggia è costruito solido pronto per farti macinare il tuo grano. Il grano rimane fresco più a lungo se non viene schiacciato, quindi risparmi denaro acquistando malti interi di kernal e macinando appena prima della giornata della birra. Facile da montare e utilizzare. Basta montare il mulino sul secchio del grano e iniziare a macinare. La tramoggia può contenere fino a 10 libbre di grano. Parti incluse: 4 lati in metallo (2 con bordi e 2 con alette) 4 protezioni in gomma trasparente 1 laminatoio collegato (fissato) a una base in legno 1 manico 1 borsa con vite e dadi Guida per l'utenteStrumenti necessari - Set di pinze, cacciavite a croce. MANUALE DI ISTRUZIONI DISPONIBILE QUI

Peso della confezione dell'articolo: 8,9 libbre. Dimensioni della confezione dell'articolo: 14,3 L x 14,3 L x 12,6 H. Facile da pulire e resistente. Il nostro mulino per cereali più popolare, un mulino di alta qualità con lavorazione di precisione che fornisce sempre un'eccellente macinatura.
Brand Northern Brewer
Color Silver
Country of Origin USA
GTIN 799418857893
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer No
Item Dimensions LxWxH 15 x 15 x 15 inches
Item model number G5-ZTOW-TPQD
Manufacturer BC Products
Material aluminium and steel
Product Dimensions 15 x 15 x 15 inches; 8.42 Pounds
Style Vintage
UPC 799418857893

2.9

13 Review
5 Star
46
4 Star
20
3 Star
17
2 Star
6
1 Star
12

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Scritto da: Matthew Seier
Great Grain Crusher for Homebrewing
This mill pounds through grain like a champ. There's no going back to my old Corona mill. When I got the mill, it required some minor assembly, basically just connecting the hopper to the rest of the mill, and attaching a hand crank. It took all of 5 minutes with a screwdriver. I removed the rubber washer they use to space the rollers, and used a credit card as a spacer. Setting the mill gap was easy when you get the hang of it- undo a screw, twist an adjustment knob back, stick a credit card in the gap, rotate the knob back until you can *just* pull the card out, screw the screw back in to lock in place, and repeat for the other side. And it only needs to be done once, no constant readjustment like my Corona needs. Time for the crush. I used the hand crank, because I do not have a low-speed, high torque drill that you need to motorize this. Cranking was tougher than on my Corona, probably because the BC crank is much smaller, the gap is smaller, and almost contacts the mill's mounting board. Honestly, the crank seems like an afterthought- this mill *wants* to be motorized. The mill fit perfectly on top of a 2-gallon bucket. I didn't condition my malt at all beforehand, and ran about 11 lbs of pilsner malt through the mill. The crush was *perfect*- while my Corona's crush was uneven, producing a good amount of flour and uncrushed kernels, the BC crushed much more evenly, producing minimal flour and no uncrushed kernels. The malt was nicely crushed, with husks moderately broken up, and endosperms exposed and cracked. My efficiency got a big boost- I got roughly 81% compared to the 63 to 73% I was getting before. My grain absorption also went down about 0.02 gallons/lb, so I ended up with over a quart more wort than I expected. I haven't tasted the finished beer yet, but early samples have been clean and promising. Based on my limited use so far, I definitely recommend this mill. I know several other brewers who own BCs as well, and they have nothing but good things to say about them over the years they have used them.
Scritto da: Dave in Montana
Been wanting one of these for a long time
We've been using an old style mill for years and have always wanted one that would allow better adjustment of milling. The only thing that could have been better was that it came with no instructions for use or cleaning. It ships with a rubber O ring on one roller that seemed would come off the first time used and I wanted to know what the deal was. Contacted the maker and got a reply saying that the O ring could be removed since it is installed for testing the rollers. They included a pdf of the adjusting instructions and cleaning tips. I've used it to mill about 24 lbs for a couple of brew batches and it works very well. I didn't attach a cordless drill to it as using the crank was fast enough for my jobs.
Scritto da: Satokad
Maybe a good buy?
Very conflicted about this purchase. This is not ‘the Barley Crusher’ , but ‘a barley crusher’ clone that appears to be very similarly constructed. Also, Northern Brewer is listed as the seller, but they are not (verified by them when I called to complain). First time that I have ever been upset with Amazon. I suppose it’s partially my fault because I didn’t read the reviews. Thought it was what I was looking for, so I ordered it. With that being said, so far, it is performing as it should. I can’t speak to its durability yet, and it does seem a little flimsy, but I have decided to keep it and give it a chance (this decision was made, in large part, due to the fact that I needed to use it the day it arrived). The grains I crushed seemed to be uniform and consistent. I hope it holds up.
Scritto da: DmanGTR
My workhorse grinder
I don't brew too often, maybe several batches a year, about 20-30 lbs of grain to be milled each batch. I first tried this with the hand crank. Took forever, as expected. So then I hooked it up to my electric drill. Much better! I set this up on top of my 6.5 gal bucket to catch the grain. The large hopper allows a good amount to be milled each time. The grind settings were good for me straight out of the box so I haven't had to play with the adjustment yet. Works well, durable, gets the job done efficiently. What's not to love?
Scritto da: Scrambyvision
Great grain mill!
I love this grain mill. Lets me crush my own grain with ease. Works perfectly and I've used it on 8 batches so far. My only issue is the hopper comes off a little too easily. I struggle with it and have to reattach it and tighten the nuts constantly. But, it's really only a small issue. Just be warned: DON'T TRY TO CARRY IT BY THE HOPPER. I learned that the hard way.
Scritto da: Old Brewer
Allmost Perfict
I thought it was a good mill for the price, so I ordered one and it was here in a week, good shipper. Operation by hand was a chore, had my knee on the board and a hand on the hopper while I cranked the mill over a 5 gallon pail,12 lbs later, I was sore. tried at cordless drill trick and was amazed how easy it was to rip through 12 lbs of grain in 8 min.
Scritto da: WeezyB
Great Product
I use this for milling grains for my homebrews. The only reason why this item didn't get 5 stars was the Barley Crusher didn't come with any instructions. The thing is fairly self explanatory for the most part, but it didn't have instructions for how to move the rollers closer together or further apart. I had to look this up on other websites and forums. Otherwise, this is a great product!
Scritto da: Shake y Mic
Not copper
No real complaints this one caught my eye because it looked copper but it is not. Pretty well-designed and put together though
Scritto da: DK
far from amazing
it will crush the grain. you will swear a bit, keep readjusting, it will stop feeding. then some grain will just go through. adjusting the mill is a pain, markings have no relevance to the actual gap. notches on the rollers have trouble grabbing the grain. milling takes twice as long as with my previous mill. hopper nice and large and thats the only up side. but who's the brilliant personmaking a hopper hold about 8lbs. why not make it another 4 inches taller so that it can actually hold a typical batch - 10-12 lbs? unfortunately its too late to return so i will have to suffer with it for another 6 months or so, something tells me those bearing will fail around that time.
Scritto da: Jeff S
Worth the price compared to other offerings
I find the quality of the hopper a bit flimsy and the rubber bumpers for the top are a kind of cheesy (but does that even matter? Really?). The mdf 'wood' base is clumsy and make sure you have it sitting on the pail properly (there is a wrong way and a right way). My first time I ended up flipping it over and dumped a bunch of grain on the floor (like I need more cleaning to do on a brew day). Just make sure you keep an elbow on the front of the base to keep it from moving around. The had crank works but the novelty of using that will wear off really quickly. The design allows for attaching a drill and this greatly increases the enjoyment of grinding grain (when the mill itself isn't flipping over on you that is). I have used it four times now (11-14Lbs each time) and it does the job fine. It holds 7Lbs of grain, grinds to the coarseness you set it at and if you make sure it is kept stable on the pail you'll be fine.
Scritto da: Richard Kovach
Works pretty well for an avid home brewer
This product met all my expectations, and for the price I am not disappointed. It does exactly what it claimed to. I wouldn't say it excels at it (i.e. is super-efficient) but I didn't expect that based on the description and price. I do find myself wondering whether the knurling on the rollers is quite deep enough. I find that with pretty much any malt, it will stop feeding into the rollers every 10-15 seconds because the rollers get slippery enough from the malt dust - this is with the recommended roller gap setting which does create a nice crush. I can avoid these stall-outs if I use a large spoon or paddle to steadily move the malt back and forth in the hopper (causing some motion in the feed hopper just above the rollers) but then I need 3 hands - one for this motion, one to hold the unit in place and a third to run the electric drill. This issue may be exacerbated by our low-humidity environment. I'm currently working on solving this challenge by attaching a small low-speed-high-torque AC motor to the drive shaft, and attaching both to a wooden base that snugly fits the top of my mashtun - so then I will only need one hand, for agitating the malt in the hopper.
Scritto da: Steve G
Just OK
I've used this for close to 50 batches of homebrew and the knurl on the rollers are wearing out. This results in the "drive" roller not grabbing the grain and spinning loose. You can "shake" the unit or rev your drill to get it going again, but it takes me at least twice as long to mill a batch now. Thankfully the grind is still fine, just a little frustrating. I don't grind anything crazy, just malt and some wheat. A good unit for starting out, but don't expect longevity for years and years. I've spoken to other people who have the brand name "muncher" and they seem to last longer. If you don't want to replace it in a couple years, maybe shell out for a three roller.
Scritto da: Dustin F.
Decent grinder
As described and have used it a lot up to this point. Decent quality. I do have to note that you often have a hopper full of grain and it doesn't or won't grind any....you have to empty the hopper and make adjustments to the rollers then it will work!? Once it starts to grind it does a fine job and continues to work until it's all done.

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