I have never had a problem capping any bottles with either a bench or hand capper. Don't use twist off. They will not work.
Not sure if it was just a choice of words or commentary on how you are using your cappers but there is no " yanking" involved. No pressure adjustment. With the hand capper place the capper on top and just pull the handles down evenly. Don't rush. Just pull evenly and smoothly. Once the handles are down it is done. No additional squeezing needed. With the bench capper again apply smooth even pressure. Don't slam it down. It will pop into place. Don't try to crush it. You should feel it when the cap is mounted.
Just a note that Bass Ale bottles are a bit of a pain to cap with a wing capper... They will seal but they're a bit more fiddly than others. Something to do with the size of the little collar part at the top of the neck.
Sam Adams is also my bottle of choice for re-use.
I frequently re-use New Glarus bottles. My sister and bro-in-law saved some Sam Adams bottles I was able to re-use as well.
New Glarus bottles are great for the homebrewer, most of the label and adhesive comes off without a cleanser. I usually just heat some water in a kettle, rinse out the bottles, fill them with hot water, and stand them up in the kettle, and top off with more hot water to get the water level above the neckerd. Neckerd? Neckard? Neck Label? Whatever. Once the temp settles and cools off to about 115F to 120F (preferably after at least 15 minutes) the bottles are cool enough to handle and whatever labels didn't just float off should peel off no problem.
Something just seems wrong with buying clean bottles from the homebrew supply when I can re-use, but I am finding that my belgian style cork-finished bottles are very handy. I can use them for beer I want to age, but I've been using them more for mead that I suspect hasn't completely fermented. Not exactly something I find at my local craft brew store.
Ron,
Glad to hear you are getting the caps on successfully now and with little difficulty.
Allan
It's fun for sure. Then the fun starts to wane. Then you discover kegging.![]()
Bottles for lyfe!
*fistbump*