Youngs fermentations are quite unusual, with the temperature continually rising during the active phase. Hitting a peak when attenuation was about complete. Most brewers initially allowed the temperature to rise, then used the attemperators to stabilise it.
The rise of around 10º F during fermentation, on the other hand, is pretty typical.
After 42 hours, the wort was dropped. Though, weirdly, the FV number seems to be the same. Though it could be that the fermenting rounds and settling squares each had their own numbers. Most beers were dropped – when they were dropped, because not all beers were – after between 40 and 48 hours.
| Youngs PA fermentation 10th July 1939 | ||||
| hours | FV | heat | gravity | action |
| 0 | 5 | 60º F | 1034.6 | pitched |
| 13 | 61.5º F | 1032.1 | ||
| 23 | 63º F | 1027.7 | ||
| 28 | 64º F | 1024.4 | ||
| 37 | 66.5º F | 1019.4 | ||
| 42 | 5 | 67.5º F | 1016.1 | dropped |
| 47 | 68.5º F | 1013.9 | ||
| 52 | 68.25º F | 1011.1 | ||
| 60 | 69.5º F | 1009.4 | ||
| 157 | 59º F | 1008.3 | racked | |
| Source: | ||||
| Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/29. | ||||

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