Skins_Brew
Well-Known Member
Sweet! A Science Fight!
No, lordbeermestrength's understanding is low.
We're not talking about putting hot water in it, corking it, and leaving it. Sure, over a long time (several hours) it will cool and then contract.
You put hot water in it, cork it, and it *will* expand - the heating of the air above the water causes that. Shake it, and it expands even more. I know this every time I clean my kegs - fill with hot water and OxyClean, seal the lid, and push on the poppet - pssshhh! goes the poppet. I would have to let it cool overnight before it would start to pull a vacuum.
Gosh, and I didn't even get a 4-year degree.
-keith
No, lordbeermestrength's understanding is low.
We're not talking about putting hot water in it, corking it, and leaving it. Sure, over a long time (several hours) it will cool and then contract.
You put hot water in it, cork it, and it *will* expand - the heating of the air above the water causes that. Shake it, and it expands even more. I know this every time I clean my kegs - fill with hot water and OxyClean, seal the lid, and push on the poppet - pssshhh! goes the poppet. I would have to let it cool overnight before it would start to pull a vacuum.
Gosh, and I didn't even get a 4-year degree.
-keith
If you fill it with hot water and then cork it, it will force the water to expand and create a higher pressure and will probably fix the dent, assuming it's not on a crease.
Yes and no.
When the hot water gets into the tank it will still be vaporizing. If the water vapor has nowhere to escape since you capped it and it is an expanding gas it will increase the pressure. Once the gas cools (which will take a bit) then it will condense back to liquid form.
I don't beleive my understanding is low. I just read what was said by Neunelfer. Did I misunderstand? Doesn't look like it.
Even at 30 psi it can hurt you. Try calculating how many pounds of air would be in the carboy. That's 30 lbs/sq inch times the amount of cubic inches in a carboy. You should fill the carboy with warm water at least 75% full, THEN put 30 psi on it. Much safer!Mythbusters did an episode where they pressure tested standard 5gal water bottles and they held 95 psi. I would guess a better bottle could do the same, so if you stay under 30 or so it should be doable.
Either way though, I would rig something and have it at the end of a 50' air hose. If it works your better bottle is fixed. If it doesn't you have a $25 firecracker.