Racehunter
Well-Known Member
I think mine was sub £20 and was definitely a good buy. No more fear of breaking bottle necks and slashed wrists
Ah so not one of these then?I think mine was sub £20 and was definitely a good buy. No more fear of breaking bottle necks and slashed wrists
Just buy a bench capper
So do bench capper work on *all* types of bottles, including the likes of LP as mentioned upthread?
As I remarked elsewhere, clear glass bottles in particular are normally 'shallow collar' type (won't work with an 'over-centre' capper).
As I don't have a bench, a bench capper isn't much use to me. I can still use the old-fashioned hand tool and mallet for the odd few bottles in a batch; if it only two or three of them, it's no great hardship.
Thanks.I’ve found Astonish Oxi Active Plus to be helpful.
I have just found a previous posting on this. I see I’m not the only one finding it hard work to recycle used bottles!Thanks.
Most bottles these days use plastic labels. I fill the bottles , carefully!, With boiling water, let them stand for a minute and the labels can be peeled off. This leaves varying amounts of glue behind on the bottle. A solvent such as white spirit fetches it off
I collect beer labels so I've done rather a lot of this though I'm aiming to get the label off in one piece
Most bottles these days use plastic labels. I fill the bottles , carefully!, With boiling water, let them stand for a minute and the labels can be peeled off. This leaves varying amounts of glue behind on the bottle. A solvent such as white spirit fetches it off
I collect beer labels so I've done rather a lot of this though I'm aiming to get the label off in one piece.
Thanks, I have white spirit in my garage so will give this a try.Most bottles these days use plastic labels. I fill the bottles , carefully!, With boiling water, let them stand for a minute and the labels can be peeled off. This leaves varying amounts of glue behind on the bottle. A solvent such as white spirit fetches it off
I collect beer labels so I've done rather a lot of this though I'm aiming to get the label off in one piece.
Some bottles you still can, Banks' for instance. Usually need to use a plastic scourer to get the last of the adhesive off.Threads Merged C_T
Just started brewing again. Once upon a time, you could just soak the labels off beer bottles …but no longer!
Has anyone got any tips on the easiest way of doing this?
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