peebee
Out of Control
Those "backpressure" or "dissolved CO2" arguments really don't add up. Pressure-wise an airlock adds less pressure than environmental (i.e. weather) changes can account for as any wine-maker with a demijohn of fermented - rather than fermenting - wine can testify: The airlock will operate in both directions in response to the weather. "Dissolved CO2" depends on pressure so will be about 0.9 volumes of CO2 while fermenting (CO2 saturation at atmospheric pressure). When fermentation stops the CO2 "blanket" fritters away in an open fermenter, and so does the dissolved CO2, but that happens after fermentation at the same time as the beer oxidises - so we don't leave the beer like that.I'm currently listening to the Experimental Brewing podcast. They're talking about an experiment with open/airlock fermenters using Saison yeast. It appears that it made a lot of difference to the speed of fermentation and the dreaded stuck fermentation that a lot of brewers get with Saison yeast. Their feeling were that it's either back pressure or dissolved CO2 in the beer that's causing the problems with the airlock batch or beer. ...
What I'm getting at is can Saisons only be made in inclement (low pressure) weather?
But I'm not putting up alternative ideas to explain it.
Instead I'll say what I do, neither leaving open or sticking on an airlock (not initially anyway). I use cheap (couple of quid?) pneumatic silencers (sort of flashy cotton-wool) like these:
I'm happy with these 1/4" BSP threads (EDIT: oops, mine are 1/2"), but I'm sure they (or something like it) come with barb connections, or whatever, and could replace an airlock directly.
(Note: these are a barrier to critters, not gas or microbes, so beer under them needs putting under airlock when ferment is done).
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