Hey, it would be quite easy make a jig to hold the bottle in the perfect place - just get a piece of plywood, drill the right diameter hole for the base of a bottle, clamp it to the bench, and voila!
Hey, it would be quite easy make a jig to hold the bottle in the perfect place - just get a piece of plywood, drill the right diameter hole for the base of a bottle, clamp it to the bench, and voil
I made a jig for my antique pneumatic capper.
![]()
Cheers,
ClaudiusB
All right dude! Did you machine that thing? Looks good. Let's have some info..
One of the greatest inventions ever.
Don't you see what this guy has done. Make something simple that works for a hobby, then market. People without drill presses will have an excuse to beg the SWMBO for a drill press. "Honey, if you don't want me capping on the counter, I really need to get a drill press and capper so I can go to the garage". "Wait, we don't have a garage, guess I need one of those too". "So that drill press comes in handy for things other than capping beer, bet it would be really useful if I had a bandsaw too...." And so on.
This guy is a genius.
I just ordered one... less than $11 including shipping. I plan on placing a piece of rubber (like the round piece you buy at Wal-Mart to help open jar lids) on the deck of the press and voila... instant bottle capper for very small price. Supposedly even caps twist off bottles...
I can't believe only 4 people have bought this item... stainless steel.
Yes, it does cap twist-offs, very nicely. I don't know how a "regular" bench capper is supposed to feel when it operates, but this is very easy to use. Put the cap on top of the bottle, line it up, and press down. You'll feel the resistance ease up as the cap is crimped and the capper slides down the side of the cap. At that point you're done; no need to press any harder. The bottle will be stuck in the capper but just rock it gently side-to-side and it comes right out!
I did a couple of twist-offs and they sealed perfectly and twisted off just fine.
Yeah I was afraid to press too hard at first and my first couple of bottles weren't really capped tight enough. I'd recommend getting a couple of empty bottles that it wouldn't hurt to break and practice on them. Just press down till you get a feel for when the crimp forms and the capper slides on down on to the cap.
Maybe you can tell a little from this photo--the small bottles were capped with the capper.
![]()
I agree. I got one from Tom for less than $10 and it is a nice heavy piece of stainless. I've bottled about 40+ bottles and the first couple I was a little hesitant to press down on the bottle, but after I realized it needed a little more umph. Good as gold now.
Yeah I was afraid to press too hard at first and my first couple of bottles weren't really capped tight enough.
Can be done, good school project.i go to school for CAD and im wondering if you could build a jig to automaticly cap bottles on a cnc mill?
Cool only if you include a cap feederi dont know if it would be reasonable but it could be cool?
Interesting how this thread started with a capper I got for two bucks and has progressed to a $500K CNC machine!![]()
You can make as many as you would like with the $500K CNC machine. However, if you sell any in the United States you run the risk of infringing a patent as I am the original designer and manufacturer.
You can make as many as you would like with the $500K CNC machine. However, if you sell any in the United States you run the risk of infringing a patent as I am the original designer and manufacturer.
Many years ago when I first started homebrewing I still had my metal lathe. So I chucked up a 2" steel round about 1.25" long and bored a blind hole large enough so the uncrimped cap just fit inside and deep enough to accomodate the cap after crimping. I also cut and polished a large radius on the edge of the bore.There were only two; one with & one without some caps thrown in. I bid on both but missed the other one.