Greg, you need to perfect your filtering. Letting the syrup settle works for home use, but rarely if ever will you get anything that is good for selling. For clear syrup, you must filter, the best methods are vacuum filters or filter presses but those are not the only good ways to filter. Before those items were invented, good clear syrup was available by using either cone filters and prefilters by small producers, or flat filters on a filter rack by larger producers.
Either method is done the same way. First decide which is right for your size operation. To filter the syrup must be hot, 210-219F is ideal. Then put a heavy (orlon or wool) filter in place, line it with 3-5 prefilters and pour the syrup into or onto the filter. A cone filter can often be done directly as you draw syrup off the evaporator. As a prefilter gets plugged, remove it carefully and resume filtering. Both flat or cont filters can be cleaned, with good clean hot water, never wring the filter or it will be ruined, just squeeze it, then hang to dry. Then bottle the syrup at 180-190F, heating it further creates more sugarsand.
Dave Klish, I recently bought a 2x6 wood fired evaporator from A&A Sheet Metal which I will be converting to oil fired
Now have solar, 2x6 finish pan, 5 bank 7x7 filter press, large water jacketed bottler, and tankless water heater.
Recently bought another Gingerich RO, this one was a 125, but a second membrane was added thus is a 250, like I had.
After running a 2x3, a 2x6, 3x8 tapping from 79 taps up to 1320 all woodfired, now I'm going to a 2x6 oil fired and a 200-425 taps.