Surely the bottles will last many more times than just a few or four or five etc. I bought them with the hope of them lasting (with care and attention of course) several years if not longer. If I for one moment thought they would last as little I would just simple use plastic pepsi or water bottles. Surely they are designed to last several years minimum? Incidentally the guy that was initially having problems tightening his Pet Bottle tops. Was that because of the stupid little plastic spare ring that is connected to the screw top? I had same problem but removed these by cutting them off since then no problem.:drink:
Quote: Graham Wheeler, brewing god...
Graham Wheeler here: "PET bottles leak.... gas like a sieve. Oxygen diffuses through the plastic from the outside in and CO2 diffuses from the inside out.... A carbonated drink can lose 15% of it's carbonation in just four weeks.... diffusion of oxygen into the bottle can oxidise a susceptible product... causing staling" (this paragraph can be found on P53 of the 2009 edition of 'Brew Your Own British Real Ale' by Graham Wheeler) Still want to use PET?? I have learned the hard way - short cuts or cheap equipment options in homebrewing nearly always lead you down the road to disaster.
PROVE IT!!! Any bottle will let o2 in you can't stop it what ever you might think! It would take a long time for the co2 to leach out of a properly sealed PET bottle as opposed to glass, look at fizzy pop bottles. And if you want to maximise fizz keep the bottles cool, more co2 can be adsorbed in a cold liquid than a warm one.plastic PET bottles are not for beer, they leech CO2 and absorb oxygen, both of which ruin beer, they are nothing more than a cheap alternative to real bottles, just drink a lot for a month using the 4 for £5 from tesco / asda, save the bottles and then buy a crown capper, easy mode and proper tasting beer.
PS don't forget glass is a liquid not a solid.
Say what? I'm a tad confused by that statement.
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