Dungeons Posted June 19, 2022 Share Posted June 19, 2022 Hi there, its been a while going through the red tape. I need to brush back up on my volumes and outputs for my 300 Liter still (79 Gallon). If i ran it hard, (14 hour period), what do you think my output may be? I have 3 1200 liter ferment tanks. Joined in 2017 and here we are....... As an FYI an F3 building classification is possible.......after 3.5 years. We received ours in April 2022Design for DYE-300L-III-Ф219 distiller 2020.03.21[39575].pdfDesign for DYE-300L-III-Ф219 distiller 2020.03.21[39575].pdfDesign for DYE-300L-III-Ф219 distiller 2020.03.21[39575].pdfDesign for DYE-300L-III-Ф219 distiller 2020.03.21[39575].pdf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thatch Posted June 19, 2022 Share Posted June 19, 2022 2 hours ago, Dungeons said: F3 building classification is possible What is the benefit of an F3 classification vs F-1/S-1? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dungeons Posted June 19, 2022 Author Share Posted June 19, 2022 F1 is a Distillery as per National Building Code. More fire ratings and separation. Doors rated, clearances from other buildings., distance to exits, materials used for construction...Quite an additional cost. The difference between the Low and Medium Hazard Industrial Occupancies is related to the combustible content of the contents of the building in question and not the potential toxicity of those materials. A Low Hazard Industrial Occupancy (F3) is defined in Part 1 of the Code as being an industrial occupancy in which the combustible content is not more than 50 kg/m or 1200 MJ/m of floor area; similarly a Medium Hazard Industrial Occupancy (F2) is defined as being an industrial occupancy in which the combustible content is more than 50 kg/m or 1200 MJ/m of floor area but not classified as High Hazard Industrial Occupancy. A High Hazard Industrial Occupancy (F1) is one that contains sufficient quantities of highly combustible and flammable or explosive materials which, because of their inherent characteristics, constitute a special fire hazard. The proponent should be asked to provide details of the combustibility of the materials being stored in the chemical storage area to ascertain whether they would be classified as F1. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adamOVD Posted June 22, 2022 Share Posted June 22, 2022 What's your heat source? Pot still or reflux? ABV of your mash? If it's steam you shouldn't have any problem doing two stripping runs in a 14hr day, possibly 3. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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