ericmark
Regular.
OK maybe I am missing something! Why will hotter weather cause a bottle bomb. In fact I would have expected the reverse. As the pressure in good weather tends to be higher than in poor weather, at the moment it has dropped to 1011 pa but I have seen it down at 996 pa in bad weather.
I am having problems with too much pressure in the bottles, since all plastic 2 litre easy enough to release some pressure, I blame myself for bottling too early. Never had a bottle burst yet, it is more down to being able to open bottle and get beer rather than foam in the glass. I realise the colder the water the more oxygen it can hold I remember with the pond how if too warm it could not retain enough oxygen for the fish. But that is with a open pond, not with the liquid in a pressure container. To get the water depleted of oxygen one is looking at around 85úC I would assume something similar for CO2?
If I have got it wrong then maybe I need to go into shed and release pressure on all beers brewed in Winter?
I am having problems with too much pressure in the bottles, since all plastic 2 litre easy enough to release some pressure, I blame myself for bottling too early. Never had a bottle burst yet, it is more down to being able to open bottle and get beer rather than foam in the glass. I realise the colder the water the more oxygen it can hold I remember with the pond how if too warm it could not retain enough oxygen for the fish. But that is with a open pond, not with the liquid in a pressure container. To get the water depleted of oxygen one is looking at around 85úC I would assume something similar for CO2?
If I have got it wrong then maybe I need to go into shed and release pressure on all beers brewed in Winter?