Everyone has their own preferred system that they find works well for them and this is mine.
I bottle all my beers and do not have much sediment, just what is produced during carbonation really. I use the old practice of 'dropping' the beer which just means transferring it from the fermenter into another container when the fermentation is dying down but before it has stopped (usually after about 3 days). It then sits in the new container under an air lock for about a week (I use an old polypin standing upright with the airlock in a bung in the tap hole). Most of the suspended material settles out in the first 24 hours and by the time of bottling it is pretty clear. I bottle straight from the polypin and put a priming and fining solution into the bottles using a syringe. One advantage of doing the transfer before fermentation has finished is that it will still generate CO2 after transfer and this should help protect against some of the risks from oxygenenation.
I bottle all my beers and do not have much sediment, just what is produced during carbonation really. I use the old practice of 'dropping' the beer which just means transferring it from the fermenter into another container when the fermentation is dying down but before it has stopped (usually after about 3 days). It then sits in the new container under an air lock for about a week (I use an old polypin standing upright with the airlock in a bung in the tap hole). Most of the suspended material settles out in the first 24 hours and by the time of bottling it is pretty clear. I bottle straight from the polypin and put a priming and fining solution into the bottles using a syringe. One advantage of doing the transfer before fermentation has finished is that it will still generate CO2 after transfer and this should help protect against some of the risks from oxygenenation.