bctdi
Well-Known Member
Have you ever tried glass or seen it in action first hand?
yep, I've used it before. Could not tell the difference in the finished beer between glass and plastic.
Have you ever tried glass or seen it in action first hand?
It certainly is, and if you don't see that, then you're quite naive.
Just because you're a klutz doesn't mean everyone else is.
TimelessCynic said:I am lost now with all this back and forth. Bleme you use glass? Bctdi you use plastic?
I think the key word you may have missed is "eventually". maybe you brew once a month for 10 years.... have you even brewed that long? How about 40 years? If you think that you will go 40 years of brewing on a regular basis and never break a 60LB piece of glass filled with beer, well good luck with that.
That very much appears to be a result of thermal shock.
Wine glasses are fragile and prone to break. I've been married 12 years and still have the full set given to me as a wedding gift. I also have all the plates and bowls, as well as my grandmothers china.
Some people are more prone to break things than others.
bja said:I didn't miss anything. If you're careful, pay attention to what you're doing and what's happening in your surroundings, you don't need luck.
Add me to the compendium...
I spent 4 hours in the ER today after dropping a carboy full of oxyclean and slicing up my thumb pretty good. We don't think there's tendon damage, but I see a hand surgeon on Monday to be sure.
I'm exceedingly careful with my carboys. I've been brewing since '91, and this is the 1st one I've broken. I had one hand around the neck and the other under the base as I tipped it to pour sanitizer out. I don't know if the neck was wet, or if I just slipped, but either way, I dropped the front of the bottle, which exploded when it hit the floor.
I already own four Better Bottles. This will be my last use of glass. I'm done.
To each their own, but I am dead certain of my preference now...
I think the key word you may have missed is "eventually". maybe you brew once a month for 10 years.... have you even brewed that long? How about 40 years? If you think that you will go 40 years of brewing on a regular basis and never break a 60LB piece of glass filled with beer, well good luck with that.
troy2000 said:Why not? Before the water companies went to plastic, there were plenty of people who spent a lifetime picking up full 5 gallon glass jugs, flipping them upside down and sticking them into water coolers, then pulling them back out and setting them on the floor when they were empty. You might as well say, "if you think you can go 40 years driving cars without getting into a wreck, good luck with that." Lots of people do....![]()
I wasn't talking about water company employees; I was talking about homeowners and office personnel. As I said earlier, the tap water where I grew up wasn't drinkable; almost everyone I knew had drinking water delivered in 5 gallon glass carboys. We all routinely handled them ourselves because water was generally delivered once a month, and I never knew anyone who broke one - although one gal I went to school with pemanently injured her back, loading one into a water cooler at work while she was wearing high heels.I don't think you have any info on how many carboys got broken by water companies.As far as the driving analagy, there are no wreck free cars available, but there are other options for carboys even if that were a good comparison the odds are that after 40 years of driving one would have been in some kind of accident. Glass is fragile / very breakable. If a casino could bet on it, they would bet on breakage. But most people already know that and are willing to risk it, and I don't have a problem with that.
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I usually clean my carboy outside in the yard but it was below freezing so I decided to do it in the bath tub. The carboy was to tall to fit under the faucet so I tilted it to fill with some water. It was still on the ground just tilted when it all of the sudden shattered into pieces. Cut all the way through the muscle and an artery. Twelve stitches total.
It was a used carboy. It definitely didn't bang on anything. I agree glass just doesn't break on its own. It had to have some unseen damage. I guess the weight of the water with it tilted just right one of those one in a million things.
I had just finished kegging an ipa and was cleaning out the trub and what not. It had been at a steady 67.
It was a used carboy. It definitely didn't bang on anything. I agree glass just doesn't break on its own. It had to have some unseen damage. I guess the weight of the water with it tilted just right one of those one in a million things.
troy2000 said:Well, once more I successfully cleaned one of my old water company jugs (this one from 1960), filled it, and got it safely tucked away in my fermenter. But you better believe I was thinking of this thread every time I touched it, and handled it more carefully than I used to...