Drinking coffee with Bold Java has inspired me to quit wasting good beans by trying to be a better home roaster.
In that spirit, I have been messing around with a Sonofresco roaster. I converted it from Nat gas to LP and in the process ended up setting the valve to the recommended water column. Along the way, I noticed that you can actually get the burner to light at about half the recommended flow.
After roasting with a Behmor a couple of years at a rate of about 10 oz per 15 minutes, I was shocked to roast my first pound of beans into 2nd crack in less than 5 minutes. I then set the gas valve regulator lower (that's the screw adjustment under a small aluminum cap you can access from beneath the machine) and banged out a pound of Geisha in about 12 minutes.
The Geisha has been pretty good; although a little risky, this was not a waste of beans. As a matter of fact -and don't tell Dave- it's nearly as good as what we cupped at his house last month.
This got me thinking about adjusting the flow with a variable regulator during the roast.
I did it on the cheap: a 0-10 psi adjustable regulator, an Ebay surplus magnehelic gauge 0-50 WC, and a handful of brass fittings from Home Depot. The regulator is good for only a fraction of it's total adjustment. 11 WC is less than 1/2 psi. The knob was too loose to permit fine adjustment so I wrapped electrical tape around the stem to give me enough friction to make it work.
Over 50 water column will blow the plug on the magnehelic gauge and vent propane next to your machine. If you try this, don't do that and if you do, don't smoke while you're doing it. If I keep this set up, I'll add a second fixed regulator for safety. It will shut off automatically when the pressure drops too fast. I'll also probably find a valve with a finer adjustment.
But I digress. I did a ramp up and drying phase, bumped the gas down to slow the roast, bumped it up again to hit first crack at 9:11, dialed it down to get a couple of minutes between first and second crack, and then ramped it up again to hit second crack at 12:48 and then finished the roast at 13:00.
The beans look and smell great. I make no claim as to the quality of this roast or this "profile." This was only an experiment to see if a cheap adjustable regulator would work in conjunction with the firmware of the machine sufficient to tailor the roast. The answer, so far anyway, is yes.
I'll post pics later tonight for anyone that's interested.