University research into home brewing.

The forum for discussing all kinds of brewing paraphernalia.
JabbA

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by JabbA » Thu Nov 26, 2015 9:13 am

Done! Could maybe do with some clarification/quantification on some of the questions, my 19 litre batches would be classed as small on some of the setups on here :-)

Good luck.

Cheers,
Jamie

duncangordon

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by duncangordon » Thu Nov 26, 2015 10:19 am

Thank you everyone! Really appreciate the support.

Duncan

TheSumOfAllBeers
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by TheSumOfAllBeers » Thu Nov 26, 2015 12:20 pm

Done. you have put in a lot thought into the questions. Best of luck.

BrewBoyJoe

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by BrewBoyJoe » Thu Nov 26, 2015 5:36 pm

Done! Couldn't resist a few passing swipes at Dundee since I used to live there!

bquiggerz

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by bquiggerz » Thu Nov 26, 2015 6:10 pm

Just completed this

scotsloon
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by scotsloon » Thu Nov 26, 2015 6:12 pm

Done!

BrewBoyJoe

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by BrewBoyJoe » Fri Nov 27, 2015 12:12 pm

Hi Duncan,
I would be interested to read the outcome of this interesting project. Perhaps you could post it on the forum. Is this research of a business studies or science nature? For example I’d like to understand the demographics of the home brewing market a bit more! While I know many, many women who love a decent pint of craft beer, I can’t recall having ever met a female homebrewer. I appreciate there is something very male about tinkering around in sheds and then combined with the end product… beer! It’s easy to understand why more men than women get involved!

Also, I would be interested to know if the background of homebrewers is more likely to be technical; scientists and engineers! Furthermore, how does this breakdown for kit vs all grain brewing. Not that it is necessary to take a highly technical approach, since software will do all the recipe adjustments and calculations these days in any case! But I would have thought that for example biochemists would be naturally drawn to this type of hobby!

A few pointers on your survey. While it was well crafted in the main, I thought a few of the blanket star rating questions didn’t make a lot of sense. For example, durability … marks out of 10! Well it’s horses for courses isn’t it! For some of the important bits of kit such as mash tun brew kettle, you’d be willing to pay a decent amount for and get decent kit that holds its heat / holds its form respectively! But for plastic containers and other bits and bobs often you may as well get the cheapest because there is no good reason not to!

With surveys and statistics as a whole, yes or no answers, while they are useful in terms of arguing conclusions, surveys have to be designed with a lot of care in order to generate a meaningful outcome.

This article I read a few days ago in the guardian sums it up perfectly:
http://www.theguardian.com/science/brai ... e-your-own

I hope this work goes well. Good luck with the write up!

GeeThom

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by GeeThom » Fri Nov 27, 2015 12:38 pm

Brewboy joe

It may be a good idea for a thread to find out different peoples backgrounds, what got them into brewing and where they live.
I myself am a scientist and explanation will be biased toward a science explanation rather than of an empirical nature
Having basic information of this kind may form the basis of building connections between people in the same area who wish to collaborate. I would suggest

Background/job
Area location
How may years brewing
Favourite beer style or type ( all beers, lager IPA, belgian Wheat, sour etc)
Age (maybe, does it matter?)
Willing to meet and brew in a local area on an ad hoc basis.


Duncan, I have Completed the survey!

MadMarble

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by MadMarble » Fri Nov 27, 2015 1:29 pm

Done. Good luck.

BluePanda

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by BluePanda » Fri Nov 27, 2015 6:52 pm

Also done.

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6470zzy
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by 6470zzy » Fri Nov 27, 2015 7:53 pm

Done and dusted :beer:
"Work is the curse of the drinking class"
Oscar Wilde

McMullan

Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by McMullan » Fri Nov 27, 2015 8:49 pm

Me too. Good luck with it, mate. I hope my response was informative and entertaining. I really do live among the proto-hillbillies, by the way. It's 'brilliant', they crack me up daily.

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stu-le-brew
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by stu-le-brew » Sat Nov 28, 2015 6:03 pm

another entry done for your survey

good luck
Stu-le-brew
All stainless system, thanks supplier on EBay France
100ltr Copper gas powered
80ltr insulated Mash Tun (Thermopot)
70ltr electric HLT with home made digital temp controller (with PID and SSR)
pumped sparge system and pumped stainless immersion chilling system for summer use (using a ice/water-bath)

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kearnage
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by kearnage » Sat Nov 28, 2015 7:31 pm

Done

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Rogermort
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Re: University research into home brewing.

Post by Rogermort » Sun Nov 29, 2015 10:30 am

Done.

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