Canty Immersion Turbidity Instant
The problem wasn't recipe or yeast. It was turbidity measurement —the cloudiness caused by suspended particles. Jenna used a benchtop turbidimeter: draw a sample, run to the lab, wait for a reading, then adjust. By the time she had data, the tank conditions had shifted. She was always chasing yesterday's beer.
Jenna installed one on Tank 7 (Fogcutter’s primary vessel). On her control screen, she now saw a live trend line, updating every second. canty immersion turbidity
"You don't pull a sample," he said. "You immerse this directly into your fermenter. Real-time. In-place." The problem wasn't recipe or yeast
Now, when new brewers ask her, "How do you get such consistent haze?" she points to the probe and says: “Don’t sample the past. Immerse yourself in the present.” If you work with any liquid process where suspended solids matter (beer, wastewater, chemicals, pharmaceuticals), the Canty immersion turbidity probe offers real-time, in-situ measurement, eliminating sampling lag and errors from bubbles or color interference. It turns turbidity from a periodic QC test into a live process control variable. By the time she had data, the tank conditions had shifted
Day 3: Turbidity spiked from 120 NTU to 680 NTU as hops were added. Then, as yeast flocculated, turbidity dropped. Jenna watched the curve flatten at 210 NTU—perfect haze stability. She closed the dump valve exactly when the immersion probe showed clean separation , not by a timer. No more guessing.
Then a sales engineer from visited. He didn’t hand her a catalog. He handed her a rugged, stainless-steel probe—the Canty Immersion Turbidity System .