BasementArtie
Well-Known Member
Yes without a cage.Without cage I assume?
Yes without a cage.Without cage I assume?
Wow - you cracked an erdinger bottle! - I use those and usually get a 4 for £6 offer. I lost a few batemans bottles but never an erdinger as they have to handle the higher pressure of a wheat beer compared to a british ale.This is what fragments of an exploding bottle look like.
Yep! This was a hefeweizen, so already targeting a higher carbonation that normal. Then it overcarbed (I have a feeling that it got a disastaticus infection) and I came back after the high-30s heatwave and found it like that in the garage (no idea what temperature it got up to in there, but likely mid 30s). 2 bottles (I can't remember what the other one was) had gone. All the rest were fine (albeit needing fridging to prevent gushers). About 80% of my bottles are homebrew ones with only about 6 going in commercial bottles as giveaways where I don't have to get the bottles back.Wow - you cracked an erdinger bottle! - I use those and usually get a 4 for £6 offer. I lost a few batemans bottles but never an erdinger as they have to handle the higher pressure of a wheat beer compared to a british ale.
I was waiting for my whole batch of dark strong Belgian to blow during the heatwave (Brewed in March). My garage was regularly up to 36C and I already knew they were gushers before this. They were carbed to 3.5 Vol.CO² in Duvel and Westmalle bottles and none to my surprise blew up.Yep! This was a hefeweizen, so already targeting a higher carbonation that normal. Then it overcarbed (I have a feeling that it got a disastaticus infection) and I came back after the high-30s heatwave and found it like that in the garage (no idea what temperature it got up to in there, but likely mid 30s). 2 bottles (I can't remember what the other one was) had gone. All the rest were fine (albeit needing fridging to prevent gushers). About 80% of my bottles are homebrew ones with only about 6 going in commercial bottles as giveaways where I don't have to get the bottles back.
yup all my 330's are Belgian bottles and none of those went pop, there are less 500's to choose from when it comes to high carb levels. I split my batch thesedays and put a slightly lower amount of priming sugar into the second half of the batch as those usually get drunk from 3 months to 2 years later.I was waiting for my whole batch of dark strong Belgian to blow during the heatwave (Brewed in March). My garage was regularly up to 36C and I already knew they were gushers before this. They were carbed to 3.5 Vol.CO² in Duvel and Westmalle bottles and none to my surprise blew up.
Never had an issue using supermarket brown beer bottles although I do agree some do have thinner glass than others.Not all bottles are the same . Commercial/supermarket beers tend to be made from thinner glass than those made for home brew. So if bottle conditioning, you are more at risk of a bottle exploding with a second hand one from a supermarket than one from a homebrew store.
I use both. Most of mine are homebrew bottles, but I also reuse ones from the supermarket to give away to friends so I don't have to ask for the bottles back. Though I've had issues with over carbonation of late, and had 2 bottles explode during the summer heat wave. Both of them were reused bottles from the supermarket. The (much larger number of) homebrew bottles were fine.
Same here. I find commercial beers way more gassed up than I like, so if they can take that pressure the problem is not the bottles.I have probably 300+ bottles,all of which are ex supermarket or offy. I've used them continually for about four years. Not one has broken under the capper neither have any exploded under pressure. My beers range from low carb Bitters to high carb wheats and lagers. The thing I would say is get a bench capper as some won't cap with a hand held and store them in a dry place as slugs love to get in them.
That's a very good point TBF , I generally brew 6%-12% beers and some of those see 2 or 3 summers....However, I do not brew high strength beers, or beers that require months in the bottle. I accept that this may be a factor.
Urgh I hate that guyI love Sam Smith bottles, 550ml size, easy soak off labels and a good thickness, have several hundred of them and never had one fail.
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