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.
Only on HBT would brew nerds argue which plastic bucket to use to store stuff in? LOL No offense to anyone, of course, since I did read the thread but this is the most bizarre thread that I have ever read.
Yup. A lot of guys use those as the hoppers for their grain mills.
Funny (or showing my senility.) The first time I saw that picture I was so taken that I forgot what thread I was looking at. Just saw that it was posted again in the "hot"" thread per my suggestion. This time I noticed the Homer Buckets and came to this thread thinking it deserved to be posted here.Agreed.
Well the Supplier of Home Depot's white buckets, not the ones listed as FDA food safe is Leaktite. I personally had a batch that was just under 2 gallons that I scaled down. I normally do 1 gallon but i have some friends coming down for St. Pattys day so I needed a little more. Long story short I just read this thread and called Leaktite directly, They advised for me to throw out my beer becasue the buckets are not food grade or food safe in any way. Now I got a decision to make, I think I am gonna take my chances but not serve my beer to my friends, just in case. I am sure the company that makes these uses a release agent that is not food safe and proably very hazardous to our health and I imagine after a week in a bucket it has leeched a little of that chemical into my beer. But in my opinion I grew up drinking water from a hose that was not food safe, and from a well that had no filter on it I probably had a lot more toxins in that than in this beer bucket. But again just in case I will not be servinig it to my friends which is why I made 2 times as much just as a precausion.
Alright, seeing as we officially hijacked this thread....
I learned a long time ago not to try and correct people who don't know much about nuclear power. Those who care enough to learn get overwhelmed and glossed over eyes, and those who don't care to learn have already made up their minds. The rest mostly don't care at all. Obviously with a few exceptions in all cases. I currently work at a commercial plant and as one of my coworkers likes to put it, the closer you are involved in the industry, the less you can be trusted to provide accurate information. Therefore, the media, who is NOT closely involved, must obviously be the best source of information. And from what I can gather, is pretty much the case.
I once got into an argument with a gentleman who thought that the steam plume from our cooling towers was radioactive smoke. I tried telling him that I work there and that it is nothing more than water vapor, not associated with anything that contacts radioactive systems and is completely safe. His response to me was, "that's what they want you to think!"
That's right about the time I gave up.