Hey ladies and gentleman, I have a question thats regarding BEER!
Today I grabbed our empty beer bottles from around the house and boxed them up and stored them away, that way my roomates would not return them to the store. My plan is to re use these for homemade beer. But then I came across this on the internet and now im wondering if some of the bottles I grabbed are not thick enough glass to withstand the carbonation. Any thoughts on this ?
this is the bottle statement
"Bottle the beer in bottles that are designed for carbonation. Bottles that are safe for carbonation have a thick glass body; avoid using ones with twist-off caps because they are too thin and the caps will not properly seal. Also avoid using bottles with a capacity greater than 1 liter."
Read more: How to Fix Exploding Beer Bottles | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_8006240_fix-exploding-beer-bottles.html#ixzz1s3vZnQzW
Today I grabbed our empty beer bottles from around the house and boxed them up and stored them away, that way my roomates would not return them to the store. My plan is to re use these for homemade beer. But then I came across this on the internet and now im wondering if some of the bottles I grabbed are not thick enough glass to withstand the carbonation. Any thoughts on this ?
this is the bottle statement
"Bottle the beer in bottles that are designed for carbonation. Bottles that are safe for carbonation have a thick glass body; avoid using ones with twist-off caps because they are too thin and the caps will not properly seal. Also avoid using bottles with a capacity greater than 1 liter."
Read more: How to Fix Exploding Beer Bottles | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_8006240_fix-exploding-beer-bottles.html#ixzz1s3vZnQzW