... I do like the logic of the same spacing from brood to super. As have Hoffmans in my 14x12 brood box, I suppose it would be SN4 that I should standardise on. ...
Ummm.
Actually SN
5s rather than 4's. So using the same top bar as in your 14x12 brood and thus the same bar/bar-beespace (yes
beespace - the comb centre-to-centre spacing being set by the hoffmans).
However, you'll note that ITLD's rationale was to absolutely maximise the long-term
total honey yield. All other considerations are subordinated to that.
Is that your aim? Do the same considerations apply?
By having 10% (11 rather than 10) more frames (and foundation) to buy, make up and get drawn, you are also giving yourself 10% more uncapping and extractor loads to deal with.
You will also have at least 10% more cappings to separate from residual honey - something I expect ITLD is better tooled-up for than you!
And apart from having more cappings,
because of the thinner combs,
a much greater proportion of your honey will be with the cappings rather than in the frames going into the extractor - one reason why some prefer the opposite route - 9 fat combs in a super rather than 10, let alone 11 ... They are concerned to get the maximum honey crop
from the extracted combs - rather than including all the cappings honey in their 'yield' calculation.
How do you extract *all* the honey from your cappings, and do you think ITLD does the same on his scale of operations?
For the hobby beekeeper even the fact that frames and foundation are generally sold in 10's rather than 11's can have a bearing - the small user needs to buy 20 to get 11 ... and 30 to get 22 ...
As always, information from other beekeepers needs to be considered carefully to see whether or not their situation is the same as yours.
What works best on a commercial scale may not be
automatically the ideal method for the hobby beekeeper!
// And regarding "the logic of the same spacing", while using the same number of frames and careful alignment cound give a better simulation of the long combs that bees can draw in the wild, the bees own logic is to make the comb/comb beespace narrower in stores comb than in brood comb - one beespace in stores, two in the brood nest ...