Cleaning Brass
Some brewers use brass fittings in conjunction with their wort chillers or other brewing equipment and are concerned about the lead that is present in brass alloys. A solution of two parts white vinegar to one part hydrogen peroxide (common 3% solution) will remove tarnish and surface lead from brass parts when they are soaked for 5-10 minutes at room temperature. The brass will turn a buttery yellow color as it is cleaned. If the solution starts to turn green and the brass darkens, then the parts have been soaking too long and the copper in the brass is beginning to dissolve, exposing more lead. The solution has become contaminated and the part should be re-cleaned in a fresh solution.
warrenlw63 said:It's quite possible that even with fibre, stainless washers and thread tape on the pipe you'll still get a very minute amount of leaking through the thread. Firstly make sure you tighten the living bejeezus out of the hex nuts. Get two spanners, turn one and lean on the other for balancing-torque.
What I've found is this will usually happen with cold water. Once it's heated to mash/boiling temps I suspect the the fibre washers, metal and tape expand enough to stop the leaking.
If all of the above fails and you still get a couple of annoying leaks :angry: get hold of some fish tank sealant.
Warren -
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