Bribie what is your expenience in the length of time you can store a home brew beer in a PET bottle.?
Brew 001 dates from late June and was fine. I've put down a Xmas Stout bottled early September so it will be approaching 4 months by Xmas / New year. So that's the limit of my experience with beer. However when we moved house a couple of years ago I found a 1.25 of cola right at the back of the pantry cupboard that would have to be over a year old and it was ok.
I suppose the question is, what effect does alcohol have on PET long term?
Quote from an American Website:
Beer -- A New Market with New Requirements
Beer is often seen as an extension of the CSD [carbonated soft drink] market, but also often requires heat fill and barrier qualities. Because the technologies used to make beer bottles are varied and the applications differ (cold filled or pasteurised), finding a common denominator is difficult. Making a bottle to meet the desired requirements has been the most important factor. The types of PET beer bottles typically used are: non-tunnel pasteurised, one way tunnel pasteurised and returnable/refillable bottles.
Barrier: Beer needs higher performance in both CO2 and O2 barriers compared to PET used in CSD applications. The level required depends on the type of beer, container size, distribution channels and environmental conditions (storage time, temperature and humidity levels). Improvements in barrier properties can be obtained via coatings, creating mutli-layer bottles and scavengers.
Colour, clarity and UV protection: Beyond the barrier properties, most beers also need to be protected from UV light. Protection can be obtained via colorants or UV additives, which can be added to the PET at the injection stage. Because of the varied requirements for beer, resins must be chosen which provide an adequate barrier, UV protection and clarity.
Strength: Beer bottles do need strength in order to maintain the CO2 pressure over a wide range of temperatures including pasteurisation. IVs in the .80 to .84 range are normally favoured. Beer bottles also tend to use champagne bases rather than footed or petaloid? bases. In all of the above cases, the resource efficiency of PET - due to its light weight - is one of the essential reasons why it is used with these consumer drink products. Not only does the consumer benefit, but the transportation costs and energy consumption in delivery are decreased due to its weight. Because PET bottles are so much lighter than alternatives, a truck can carry 60% more of the beverage and 80% less packaging ?a fuel saving of 40% and less air pollution.
So I guess I've answered my own question - I would tend personally to use my current CSD PET bottles but don't count on getting more than maybe six months out of a brew, however the Coopers style PET are obviously the enhanced ones referred to in the article above and could be used for long term storage.