JimW
10-18-2006, 12:33 AM
As I mentioned a few weeks ago we are building a small sugar house at the high school I teach at. We've taken some of the suggestions from here, thank you very much. I just thought I would give a little update. We are finishing the plans and if all goes as planned . . .
Our sugar house will be 8 feet by 14 feet and sit on a 8.5' by 16' float over trailer, so we can take it to various events. The exterior will be 1" by 10" pine board and batten, with a metal roof, and copula for ventilation.
The floor will be sealed plywood, with the hopes of installing tile in the future. For the interior we are not sure yet, but were thinking just using 1/4" plywood and sealing it with non-toxic paint/varathane to produce a flat easy to clean surface.
We will install 4 CF lights and a small solar panel as a demonstration of alternative energy, as well as wire it to contact into the school power.
For maple syrup production we will have two 45 gallon drums outside, sap will be poured from our 5 gal collection pails through a screen filter into the first drum. A bilge pump with pump the sap through a UV sterilizer and to the second drum.
A second pump will the pump the sap into the sugar house through a 5 micron cartridge water filter into a smaller tank in the rafters of the house.
Gravity will then transport the sap down through a homemade copper pipe pre-heater and into the small pre-heater pan on top of our 2' by 3' evaporator.
We will draw off the sryrup from the evaporator a couple Brix below "finished" syrup and filter it through a couple pre-filters and Orlon cone. We will finish the syrup on our propane turkey cooker "finisher" (unless we can find a biodiesel burner to use) and then filter the finished syrup again.
We will bottle the syrup inside keeping it warm on the stove or we may try to rig up some type of "coffee maker" bottling unit to keep the syrup hot as we bottle.
If we can't process all the sap we collect that day, (I live 1 hour drive from school, so I don't want to be there until the sun comes up), we will try and keep it cold in the outside 45 gallon drum by adding blocks of frozen sap, and then running the sap through the UV sterilizer again the next day.
We are planning on 50 taps this year (25 buckets, 25 tubes).
That is our plan, we'll have to see how things "pan" out over the next couple months, hopefully we will have it fully operational this year.
Jim
Our sugar house will be 8 feet by 14 feet and sit on a 8.5' by 16' float over trailer, so we can take it to various events. The exterior will be 1" by 10" pine board and batten, with a metal roof, and copula for ventilation.
The floor will be sealed plywood, with the hopes of installing tile in the future. For the interior we are not sure yet, but were thinking just using 1/4" plywood and sealing it with non-toxic paint/varathane to produce a flat easy to clean surface.
We will install 4 CF lights and a small solar panel as a demonstration of alternative energy, as well as wire it to contact into the school power.
For maple syrup production we will have two 45 gallon drums outside, sap will be poured from our 5 gal collection pails through a screen filter into the first drum. A bilge pump with pump the sap through a UV sterilizer and to the second drum.
A second pump will the pump the sap into the sugar house through a 5 micron cartridge water filter into a smaller tank in the rafters of the house.
Gravity will then transport the sap down through a homemade copper pipe pre-heater and into the small pre-heater pan on top of our 2' by 3' evaporator.
We will draw off the sryrup from the evaporator a couple Brix below "finished" syrup and filter it through a couple pre-filters and Orlon cone. We will finish the syrup on our propane turkey cooker "finisher" (unless we can find a biodiesel burner to use) and then filter the finished syrup again.
We will bottle the syrup inside keeping it warm on the stove or we may try to rig up some type of "coffee maker" bottling unit to keep the syrup hot as we bottle.
If we can't process all the sap we collect that day, (I live 1 hour drive from school, so I don't want to be there until the sun comes up), we will try and keep it cold in the outside 45 gallon drum by adding blocks of frozen sap, and then running the sap through the UV sterilizer again the next day.
We are planning on 50 taps this year (25 buckets, 25 tubes).
That is our plan, we'll have to see how things "pan" out over the next couple months, hopefully we will have it fully operational this year.
Jim