I like it. I tried it and it worked amazingly. ill post a pic later but I got a 20% pull on a single squish... but the thing is that it just looks cool as fuck dripping out like it used to drip off a razor scraping warm bho.... nostalgic it was.
I actually started pressing it while the plates were at room temp and then turned on the heat. that way there was alot of compression already applied before the parchment was warm preventing alot of the deformation I usually see and it kept the flowers from spreading out alot like often noted with rehydrated flowers.
the heaters peaked at 240°f but it actually collects better because lower temp stuff pushes out first followed by the higher temp stuff.
Hey folks,
Does anyone have any information on this mat from ikea?
It looks to be of the same construction as the other "SAFE" silicon baking ware they sell.
I plan to cut one up and press with it (in place of parchment) and use another as a non-stick work surface.
Thanks
I
How are you doing the ' burrito ' tech ?
By pre-folding the parchment to allow bigger
oozing exits ?
tia
Very nice!
Sorry if this has been covered, but when I first saw the video I was seeing something new for the first time.
Is this burrito tech? It looks like an oversized parchment used with decent tonnage press in order to guide the rosin away from the heat source. Which I suppose effectively does something similar.
I guess I thought burrito tech was parchment folded in a way that the rosin flows either to both open sides or one open side "enchilada" style (because the other side is shut to force output in one direction). However, what you are showing looks like a large parchment folded over once like normal, which I guess I'll just call a taco to match the rest of the terminology theme lol.
Any ideas what type of actual press is used in the rufiocraft video?
@farscaper sorry if you've mentioned it before, but what type of press are you running in that video?
This is cool. Can I ask how you're regulating your temperature?
For any who have gone the bar clamp (Irwin XP600 for example) + hair straightener elements + jbweld route, is the insulating material for the plates to the clamp necessary? I don't have access to any woodworking materials so that's where I'm coming from with that question.
VERY Curious about this... I have all my chips and rarely do a second press. Please expound on this good sir. I was planning on grinding them up and running them through the mflb, but this sounds much more interestingAlso, save your chips and make EC tincture. Amazing.
VERY Curious about this... I have all my chips and rarely do a second press. Please expound on this good sir. I was planning on grinding them up and running them through the mflb, but this sounds much more interesting
Very cool. Question for you regarding heat transfer. Are you going to stick a piece of wood in the top pipe to stop the press from touching the plate (so it's just metal on metal contact at the screws)? And a wood block under the bottom plate stand? Or are you skipping it and going straight metal on metal? Just curious thanks!Sorry to derail the parchment folding tech convo but I just had to share.
They should be here in a few days
@Joel W. went above and beyond my expectations for these new H press jaws. Thank you sir!!
Carry on...
No worries! Yep, I'll be doing wood insulators. I think the wood is required because if it isn't used, the heat just transfers from the plates to the surrounding metal and it never gets up to temp (at least it doesn't if using 60w soldering irons for your heaters)Very cool. Question for you regarding heat transfer. Are you going to stick a piece of wood in the top pipe to stop the press from touching the plate (so it's just metal on metal contact at the screws)? And a wood block under the bottom plate stand? Or are you skipping it and going straight metal on metal? Just curious thanks!
**EDIT: Never mind, just visited Joe's jaws thread and saw the full picture. Don't think I can delete post.
I believe enchilada tech is the best for larger plates if the goal is to get the oil out and away from the heat as quickly as possible. With only one end open on the burrito, the oil on the closed end has further to travel instead of going straight out.Yep, that is what I am doing, but with a parchment burrito pouch. From the IG videos I've seen, it looks like the pros are pre-packing screen pouches, and then doing multiple pouches per collection paper.
I got great yeild from 4gs, and pressed and collected in 15-20 min tops on a 2" straightener. Pretty nice effiency gain from my previous nug-ata time routine.
Quilon. Search this thread for it.Ran out of parchment paper yesterday and the Reynolds Wrap brand was on sale, so I picked some up. IMO this brand sucks for our purposes. It is much thinner than the Meijer generic I have been using, and it even seems to bleed rosin through a bit. Gonna give the name brand to the wife to use in the kitchen and going back to the 'cheapo' stuff that is much more resilient. Anyone else had this experience?
Yes, and stay away from paper with quilon in it.and it even seems to bleed rosin through a bit. Gonna give the name brand to the wife to use in the kitchen and going back to the 'cheapo' stuff that is much more resilient. Anyone else had this experience?