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Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Roasting school might give you a good set of basics but your own experience over time and trying things, being adventurous, hell burn up a batch or two, you'll have a lot of fun doing it!
Then the magic comes, cupping! Cupping is the real art and there are a lot of coffee experts as I am sure you have noticed on this site! Don't kid yourself, roasting coffee is about good coffee, consistent coffee and fair prices in the big scheme of things. Once you get a great roast profile of a coffee that is good, stik with it and gain a following and soon you too will be pounding the pounds with the rest of us.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
David, why do I get the feeling you've ran like hell from a burning roasting shop?
David Stellwagen said:Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Roasting school might give you a good set of basics but your own experience over time and trying things, being adventurous, hell burn up a batch or two, you'll have a lot of fun doing it!
Then the magic comes, cupping! Cupping is the real art and there are a lot of coffee experts as I am sure you have noticed on this site! Don't kid yourself, roasting coffee is about good coffee, consistent coffee and fair prices in the big scheme of things. Once you get a great roast profile of a coffee that is good, stik with it and gain a following and soon you too will be pounding the pounds with the rest of us.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
When you see the exhaust pipes and roaster start to glow red, it's time to turn the fire supression over to the pro's. In other words, RLH. Joe
Mike Morand said:David, why do I get the feeling you've ran like hell from a burning roasting shop?
David Stellwagen said:Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Roasting school might give you a good set of basics but your own experience over time and trying things, being adventurous, hell burn up a batch or two, you'll have a lot of fun doing it!
Then the magic comes, cupping! Cupping is the real art and there are a lot of coffee experts as I am sure you have noticed on this site! Don't kid yourself, roasting coffee is about good coffee, consistent coffee and fair prices in the big scheme of things. Once you get a great roast profile of a coffee that is good, stik with it and gain a following and soon you too will be pounding the pounds with the rest of us.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
Well here's the thing. I've been around roasters a while. Some that seem to catch fire weekly. We were running a very busy production schedule and the chaff maintenance was, well neglected!
Kidding aside, roaster fires are no joke. They can burn your place to the ground! But that is not likely if anybody is paying attention. Roaster fires can ruin your roaster too. If a fire got really hot, 1200 degrees or so, your drum can warp,(not on a Sivetz of course) but your chimney can be ruined, duct work, the cute thing you hire to heat up the Roaster can get smoke inhalation. That's always bad when that happens.
Burning Down The House
David
Joseph Robertson said:When you see the exhaust pipes and roaster start to glow red, it's time to turn the fire supression over to the pro's. In other words, RLH. Joe
Mike Morand said:David, why do I get the feeling you've ran like hell from a burning roasting shop?
David Stellwagen said:Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Roasting school might give you a good set of basics but your own experience over time and trying things, being adventurous, hell burn up a batch or two, you'll have a lot of fun doing it!
Then the magic comes, cupping! Cupping is the real art and there are a lot of coffee experts as I am sure you have noticed on this site! Don't kid yourself, roasting coffee is about good coffee, consistent coffee and fair prices in the big scheme of things. Once you get a great roast profile of a coffee that is good, stik with it and gain a following and soon you too will be pounding the pounds with the rest of us.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
May be true for your neck of the woods but don't assume everywhere. SW Washington Air Quality Control has set a specific standard that any roaster with a rated capacity of 10LB or larger must have an afterburner. Which is one major reason I started with a 3k, to save ~$10k not having an afterburner. And by many standards yeah it's small, but my USRC 3k can knock out 24LB per hour (three eight pounders per hour roasting/cooling simultaneously) all day long which is enough capacity for me at the moment. I look forward to needing a larger roaster.... David Stellwagen said:Well Mike, each local may have some ordinances but mainly big cities with regard to polution and your "Carbon Footprint; that's what I get when I walk across hot coals!
Check with your local US EPA Office (www.epa.gov) give them your particulars and get a letter from them saying no problem. They are not going to require any special permitting for a small roaster and will likely do it all by mail based on the specs you deliver to them. Your BTU's will just not be enough to matter to the Government but it's nice to have a letter saying so. Get good fire insurance because if you roast and you roast long enough you WILL have a roaster fire. Have a plan in plan for that contingency. You know, scream FIRE and run like hell! Check with your county fire guys too and let them bless your installation. This all goes a long way when the lawyers get involved.
Glad to help any way I can.
Just ask.
Best,
David
Hey Mike-
I've been buying equipment for the shop for the last several months. The very first thing I bought, was the roaster. I got a used Diedrich IR-3 from a failed shop in California. I've been roasting coffee in it now for a couple of months, and honestly, it's not that hard. Finding beans that I like, or even love, that's harder. But roasting in and of itself...that's not too hard.
As to size, you want to be careful with too small. My roaster is theoretically capable of 7 lbs at a batch, but at 6 lbs, my roast profiles all go to heck. I doubt 7 lbs would actually even fit. Roasts between 2-5 lbs are nice. 1 lb is actually tough, because the bean thermometer is getting more air temp than bean temp. Anyway, that's with my IR-3. I suspect a 3 kilo Probat, USR, or San Franciscan will all be about the same with regard to batch size, and what the roaster likes and doesn't like.
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