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Any new news on Home Depot Homer buckets?

Discussion in 'General Homebrew Discussion' started by strantor, Jan 30, 2013.

 

  1. #81
    forcabrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Homer bucket grain storage a bad Idea?
     
  2. #82
    Bradinator

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    That's if you had a wicked blow off, which I could still happen for sure. To be fair I definitely agree with you on the larger bucket and larger batch approach, not so much from a cost savings perspective but a logical one. It takes the same time to make a 1 gallons, a 3 gallon, a 5 gallon and so on, so why not make a bigger batch and get more beer the first time around. :mug:
     
  3. #83
    clevernonsense

    Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Personally, I am wary of even "Food Grade" plastics. The US legally allows various recycled plastics to go into food grade containers, and generally focus on percentages of safety rather than being 100%. Add the fact that home brews are acidic and stay in the container longer means you end up with a much greater opportunity for leaching.

    Also, remember BPA? That's still used in some food storage containers and is proven to be harmful to human health.

    I fully realize I'm being overly cautious, but it seems like a silly thing to risk just to save a little $. Lowes does have labelled food grade buckets for only like 50 cents more, which I feel safer using for other things (like kruat/kimchi etc).

     
  4. #84
    norsk

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Curiously, just as most 5 gal buckets hold more than 5 gal., the same applies to 6 and 7 gal buckets. My 7 gal buckets hold 7 1/2 gals....
     
  5. #85
    broadbill

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Not the 5 gallon homer buckets I have.

    Oh, you are talking about those super-expensive, high-falutin buckets the LHBS sells? Well, you should get something for the price premium, right??? :)
     
  6. #86
    allaway

    Active Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    I'm Ron Burgundy? [​IMG]
     
  7. #87
    Eddiebosox

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Yeah, i am thinking about getting a few of these for my split batch experiments.
     
  8. #88
    Varmintman

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    And here I was thinking this thread was going to die:smack:
     
  9. #89
    Eddiebosox

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Thats not really true. All studies about its effects on health are inconclusive and the FDA has not banned it because there is no evidence its harmful. they banned it on use in baby bottles only and that was just to boost consumer confidence after the furor that came out. its been in many of our food containers since 1960.
     
    pabloj13 likes this.
  10. #90
    jmcvay131

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Just bought one today.
     
  11. #91
    thadius856

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    You're forgetting stainless fermenters, like corny kegs, sanke kegs, conicals, etc.
     
  12. #92
    forcabrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Haha
     
  13. #93
    thadius856

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    If you believe BPA is harmful, then I sure hope you're not drinking beer out of cans or eating any food out of cans. Both are BPA-lined.
     
  14. #94
    psymonkey

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    While this is written clearly, please clarify - he boiled IN a plastic homer bucket??? Am I reading that right?
     
  15. #95
    pwkblue

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
  16. #96
    TheBrewingMedic

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    a picture AND video ....and y'all were busting on a guy for using cheap buckets for fermenting, this takes it to a whole new level


    edit: and whilke I am all for innovation and new tricks/gadgets, there is a reason plastic buckets are not rated for high temps, such as the acetol they likely contain....and the formaldehyde the acetol releases when it's heated
     
  17. #97
    doctorRobert

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    and then he was never heard from again.....
     
  18. #98
    itzkramer

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Don't make it a habit to ferment in Homer Buckets. They're made for mixing paint and cement. Store grain in them, but maybe use a liner for long term storage stuff. Would you use the same cheap orange plastic to eat off of if they made dishes out of it? Maybe once...if I had to, but not by choice.

    Come on, common sense people.
     
  19. #99
    doctorRobert

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Go visit a marshalls, and you'll find plenty of orange plates. Sure they might be a little fancier, but I doubt any of those have a #2 food grade on the button.
     
  20. Varmintman

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    Come on guys one more and it will be ten pages about the merits and lack of merits with a orange bucket

    You just cannot make this stuff up:D
     
    passedpawn likes this.
  21. Big_Cat

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    I just came from Home Depot and i took pictures of the homer buckets ...they are way skinnier and the 5 gallons are til the rim... in all fairness I've never brewed on buckets but i think its very possible and as long as you are sanitary you should be fine..



    ForumRunner_20130201_174038.png


    And this is the bottom of it with its codes


    ForumRunner_20130201_174028.png
     
  22. doctorRobert

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    whats funny is if they were died white, like a brew bucket, than nobody would have a problem with it. Am I wrong in thinking that for the regular fermenters they put something in the plastic to make them white?
     
  23. Homercidal

    Licensed Sensual Massage Therapist.  

    Posted Feb 1, 2013
    HDPE is naturally somewhat translucent. They 'could' add any color they want, but it comes raw as whiteish color. Molded some gasoline funnels today with 'natural' HDPE. It's the same material used in milk jugs and other things.

    Also it might be worth it to know that any product not approved as food safe or better may have other things in it such as mold release, oil, contamination from other materials, etc. as a consequence of a production facility. Food grade products have a more stringent cleanliness and contamination standard to follow.
     
  24. jerseyale

    Banned

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
  25. strantor

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    For the record I think that the mold releasing agent argument that was brought up is totally valid. I have worked on injection mold machines before and watched the operators. They spray the mold with some nasty stuff called "stoner" and shoot the molten polymer/rubber/plastic/HPDE/whatever pellets in there. The pellets melt against and conform to the shape of the surface of the freshly "stoner" coated mold, so I assume that some of that crap HAS to become impregnated into the plastic. I had not thought of this (did not realize that buckets were injection molded) before asking about the homer buckets. In light of this, I would recommend using only food grade containers for storing grains or fermenting.

    And that is my final word. I am officially withdrawing from this discussion. thanks again everybody.
     
    fearwig likes this.
  26. TyTanium

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    10 pages on Homer buckets might be completely ridiculous, but when I read posts like this ^^^^^, I think it's worth educating myself.
     
  27. Darren231

    Member

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    If you're looking to go on the cheap for fermenters go to Menards and purchase 4 gal spring water bottles...I think I paid $5/ea. I use three of them for a 10 gal batch. I get my knife steel nice and hot, melt a hole through the nipple and stick the air gap in. It's nice and tight. I've thought about flipping them and poking two holes and shoving a tube to the airspace and venting through the bottom and installing a drain situation to capture the yeast.
     
  28. thadius856

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    Thanks for the follow-up, OP. I'm out too guys.
     
  29. Disander

    Member

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    Through all of this thread I have come to a conclusion of my own (Secret One). Thank you to everyone that has actively participated!

    ~Dis
     
  30. castermmt

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    I seen some at Lowes. They have a food grade bucket

    bucket.jpg
     
  31. pwkblue

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 2, 2013
    I am brewing a 3.5 gallon batch right now...that will be going into the Lowes Food grade 5 gallon bucket for fermentation...using a gasketed ale pail lid which fits perfectly.
     
  32. Gameface

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 3, 2013
    Dang, I have about 12 homer buckets. I don't use them for fermentation but I have been storing grains in them. I'm not dead yet or anything but had I read this first I would have bought something else to use to keep grain in.
     
  33. clevernonsense

    Member

    Posted Feb 4, 2013
    Since it's dry goods and presumably not left in there very long, not something to get too anxious about.
     
  34. unionrdr

    Homebrewer, author & air gun shooter  

    Posted Feb 4, 2013
    I kinda thought they'd be ok for grains anyway,being dry. Mine has had a lot of water,PBW,& starsan run through it over the course of the year I've been using it. I wonder if that could've made any kind of improvement?...
     
  35. Gameface

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 4, 2013
    Well I tend to stock up and while I usually plan to brew regularly I've actually gone the last 3 months without brewing because my brewing area in the backyard has been snowed in and I've been too lazy to shovel it out. I have some uncrushed grains that have been in buckets for about a year.
     
  36. LTownLiquorPig

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 4, 2013

    I started fermenting in recycled moasses buckets, back when I was still using Cooper's kits. I figured I'd just use less extract/sugar/brew enhancer and make 16L batches instead.

    Pretty sure it would only take one try for somebody to put a 5 gallon batch in a 5 gallon bucket, if they got that far along anyway.
     
  37. jerseyale

    Banned

    Posted Feb 4, 2013
    i've drained my hot sparges into the orange buckets tons of times without issues. I also let starsan solution sit in them for weeks without issue
     
  38. itzkramer

    Well-Known Member

  39. Skins_Brew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 16, 2013
    I didn't read the whole thread, but here is a good reason why HD buckets are cheaper, even if they are HDPE.

    HD orders the buckets by the hundreds of thousands, if not millions. Each of those buckets costs them a couple of cents. A company that sells "Brew Buckets" are maybe only buying a few thousand at a time.
     
  40. itzkramer

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Feb 16, 2013
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