Behold PopSci staff photographer/mad scientist John Carnett's homemade microbrewery: an elaborate device that boils, ferments, chills, and pours home-crafted ale

Choice Brew The Device can serve up to four kinds of beer at once while fermenting a fifth. John B. Carnett

Launch the slideshow to see the step-by-step guide to how the Device works

What if there were a machine-a beautiful shiny machine-and all it did, with almost no work from you, was make you beer? Such was the dream that drove PopSci staff photographer John Carnett to spend weeks building what he simply refers to as the Device: a stainless-steel two-cart brewing system that starts by boiling extract-concentrated wort, or pre-fermented beer-and ends with a chilled pint.

In most home-brewing setups, each step in the process requires moving the beer to a new container by hand, which increases the chance of contamination and requires you to lift stuff. Carnett's machine keeps everything in the carts' closed system and requires only that he swap a few CO2-pressurized hoses to move the liquid along. It also employs a complex temperature-control system to regulate the fermentation (often done in a corner of a basement) to within a degree or two. A couple weeks later, the same system chills the beer on its way from keg to tap, so the Device is always ready with a cold pour and consumes no power when it's not serving or fermenting.

The next step: adding a third cart to make wort from raw grain instead of extract. But, says Carnett, there's a lot of "testing" of this design to be done first.


The H2Whoa Credo: DIY can be dangerous.

We review all projects before publishing them, but ultimately your safety is your responsibility. Always wear protective gear, take proper safety precautions, and follow all laws and regulations.

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3 Comments

It also employs a complex temperature-control system to regulate the fermentation (often done in a corner of a basement) to within a degree or two. http://www.crazypurchase.com

Absolutely correct

Andrew
www.emailextractor14.com

each step in the process requires moving the beer to a new container by hand, which increases

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