I admit, when I ordered his VST Refractometer, Vince from VST labs already suggested I might order extra syringe filters but at the time, 50 of those seemed a lot to get started. Of course I rushed through most of them in the first week so I ordered 50 more. They don't come cheap though: $89 for fifty plus $34 for shipping to NL.
As I ordered 500
pipettes and a box of #7
syringes locally from
Hinmeijer, I wondered if compatible filters could also be found nearby. René Hinmeijer is looking into this and Adriaan, a fellow roaster from the Dutch forum, quickly found a possible alternative from an Asian company reselling
German filters:
Minisart by Sartorius. These cost me not much more than the postage of the original VST filters. They are "high flow" syringes with 0.2 micrometer pores. I do not know the pore size of the originals though.
Since the special filters are not necessary when measuring coffee that has passed through paper filters, like drip coffee, I also got a
Hario V60 Dripper.
If the measurements of the VST and the German filters come close, the latter would be a great alternative and if a particular measurement is most critical, I could double check the measurement with the original filter, to be sure my readings are compatible with what others would get with the same lab standard.
I took 20g of Finca Tamana beans roasted 17 february (Tonino # 84 today) and pulled 30g espresso. Cooled in a larger ceramic cup, stirred well, filled two identical syringes, screwed a VST on one, a Minisart on the other and pushed a few ml's with each into their own identical shot glass.
Even though the Minisart is a "high flow" filter, it took much longer (and more power) to push enough fluid out of it. Afterwards, on close up pictures of the filter, it showed two cracks. I can understand why the manual advises to "take care when using syringes with a volume less than 10ml since they can generate a pressure greater than the maximum operating pressure of the Minisart unit."
Next I took two brand new pipettes and did my measurements after first calibrating the refractometer and cleaning the eye of the meter with alcohol between measurements.
The Minisart sample showed 11.1 % TDS and the VST sample showed 11.2 % TDS.
So that's very very close and if subsequent comparisons turn out as good, this will be a fine alternative as long as I keep my glasses on and take care not to explode the filters.
The drip alternative (the leftover poured onto a filter which I made wet with tap water first) showed 9.8 % TDS on the first ml's that passed. I should try this again, this time on a dry filter paper and with more espresso, taking the time to let it all drip through.
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Extraction ready to measure |
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VST filter and Minisart sister |
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Two samples from same extraction |
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Minisart after use, notice the hair cracks |
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Both syringes & filters after the job |
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Result of VST measurement visible |
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The drip test, not as close to the original: diluted & not fully filtered yet |
Reacties
I am not wanting to buy more from VST as they are so expensive...
Lachie
Perth
Australia
So a regular 10ml Luer-Lock Syringe is still good to use the the Minisart filter? I'm considering using another filter than than VST.
Dave
USA