I had three bottles go during the very hot spell that we had at the end of July.
That's how they're meant to fail under excess pressure - the bottom blows out. If the neck breaks like it did for @Steve_89 then I suspect that it got weakened somehow, maybe due to too much downward pressure from the capper.I had three bottles go during the very hot spell that we had at the end of July. My beers are stored on a bench in my garage that gets hot on sunny mornings. I moved them all onto the concrete floor where it’s about 3 or 4 degrees cooler.
I’ve had no problems since until I found this one, this morning.
It’s a Porter that was brewed on 7 May with an OG of 1.056 The SG had dropped to 1.013 on 12 May and stayed the same until I bottled it on 29 May
I batch primed 21 litres with 90g of sugar, aiming for 2.0 volumes of CO2.
I opened another bottle today and it gushed, so overprimed, I guess.
Do you think that the hot weather could have caused it or perhaps not mixing sufficiently when priming. I don’t remember the other bottles that I opened earlier were over-carbonated.View attachment 52680
Definitely not overprimed, as mentioned.I batch primed 21 litres with 90g of sugar, aiming for 2.0 volumes of CO2.
I opened another bottle today and it gushed, so overprimed, I guess.
Do you think that the hot weather could have caused it or perhaps not mixing sufficiently when priming.
I would guess the gushing is caused by another factor--wild yeast or something.
Maybe brewers with the same factors (country and time of year) could provide insight.For those who have never had this, I think you're lucky. Maybe there's an increased risk because of where I live, out in the countryside?
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