petesbrew
Lover of Beer
- Joined
- 31/3/06
- Messages
- 5,198
- Reaction score
- 172
Cheers Bum, I'll open them with PPE. B)Jeez. Tread carefully with the rest, Pete. Good luck.
It all paves the way towards kegging too.
Cheers Bum, I'll open them with PPE. B)Jeez. Tread carefully with the rest, Pete. Good luck.
Had one go boom 3 weeks ago.
Coincided with a sudden rise in temperature in Melbourne on a really hot day so will agree with Raven's early assessment on post 3. Would agree that this happened with me and that sudden heat was a cause.
Another factor with my explosion was that the bottle was a VB twist top long neck that had seen some reuse.
Don't seem to have these issues with the heavier glass like Coopers Tallies. I guess bottles that come from bottle conditioned beers - like coopers, belgians and the like tend to be packed in thicker glass and able to cope with a bit more pressure. I guess CUB and the like put the words 'Not for refill' on the side for a reason. Not that that's going to stop me!
Something to consider.
Hopper.
Its reassuring to read the last, ive been only collecting (gee such terrible work) only coopers longnecks for my brew, Ive got em stored in a Coop's box in a garbage bag or two for just these reasons... is it worth giving the box a kick or two the day before ya wanna bring em out?
One last and very important theory, both November's and tonights explosions were with the same yeast - WLP550 Belgian Ale. I'll blame my yeast management, not the yeast strain.Scary stuff, but glad to hear you weren't hit.
It's kinda one of the top ten reasons I take a break from brewing for most of January. That, and catching up on drinking what I made while I'm on holidays.
Cheers - Fermented.
Yep, I've heard that too. The one that went was a stubby, not sure what type it was, but some of them are very thin these days.My brother in law works for the recycling part of Geelong City Council, he reckons that there is a major difference between bottle glass and the kind of glass used for vases, glasses etc. When people put broken glasses etc in their recycle bin, it ends up causing weaknesses in the bottles made from this recycled glass.
Anyway, I don't know squat about that, but it would not surprise me.
When I bottle I use champagne bottles, extra tough and free at your local garbage dump or nearby restaurant dumpster.
i have had a few blow the bottoms out but nothing serious.Lucky they were in a foam box like the ones chemists get for holding Dry ice in.
Although after i bottle i won't leave them on the kitchen table to carbonate.........
I got them at the moment in my 70L esky holds 35 longnecks and have already had 6. they have been bottled for 8 days now. SHould be better by wednesday but i think i got some of them infected..
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