

keelanfish wrote:I believe the temp you should use in priming calculations is the temp at the end of fermentation. When yeast are producing CO2, the colder the liquid, the more CO2 can be absorbed. The saturation point at any given pressure decreases with temp increases. So, if you are fermenting at 55 degrees, you will have to add less priming sugar to achieve a desired level of carbonation than you would if you were fermenting at 70 degrees. Cold crashing periods don't count since CO2 isn't typically being produced at that time.

brewinhard wrote:As I understand it, the temperature at bottling time should be the actual temperature of the beer at the very point of bottling. If you cold crashed your beer for a few days then you will definitely want to let the beer warm up to room temps or so before bottling. the volumes of CO2 dissolved in suspension will change based on the temperature of the beer. I have had best results using the temperature of the beer at bottling time. In the back of Jamil's BCS there is a nomograph chart for bottling which mentions that the temperature used is the temperature of the beer at bottling time.

brewinhard wrote:As I understand it, it means the temps that the actual beer is at when bottling. Which makes sense to me as there would be "X" number of volumes of CO2 dissolved in suspension at that temp.
If you go by fermentation temps, then lets say I ferment at 68 deg F, then crash cool for 3 days at 40 deg F. Obviously there would be more CO2 dissolved in the beer at 40 deg than at 68 deg. That is why I have always followed the beer temp at bottling time with best results.

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