burninator
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Glass Carboy Explosion is my favorite jazz fusion band.
I liked their early stuff, before they blew up.
Glass Carboy Explosion is my favorite jazz fusion band.
I'm gonna procure a roll today at work.
I have not been able to find the post I saw well over a year ago where some guy wrapped his whole carboy in silver duct tape, but I did find this one using clear duct tape and the thread discussion goes into plastic dip as well:
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f11/trying-solve-carboy-problem-129920/index4.html#post1876610
He used clear duct tape. I assume plastic wrap works just as well, the duct tape is more of a solution that you wouldn't take on and off. But would you need to?
I think another possible problem is that many (im not saying the OP did, but maybe) people put their blow off tube too deep under water. This added head pressure makes it more difficult for a clog to clear, particularly in "small" hose (which I use with no problem all the time btw). Don't believe that 6" of head pressure makes a difference? Raise your tube up during active fermentation and watch how much faster it burps.
OP - condolences for the loss of your beer
Yesterday I brewed. I had considered ferming the 5 gal. hefe (WLP380 @ 64F) in my 6.5 gal glass carboy. That is, until reading the OP's post. Instead, I put it in a plastic bucket. Normally, I'd use a 3-pc airlock, but I decided to do a blowoff instead (all I had available was a length 3/8" racking tube and the base of the 3-pc airlock, which accommodated the tubing perfectly). And I'm glad I did. This AM, the blowoff was bubbling like a banshee, while at the same time, the bucket lid looked like a volcanic dome ready to explode! Obviously, the 3/8" hose, while in no way constricted, was/is barely enough to handle the activity.
I had also read the above post, so this AM, I raised the end of the blowoff tube off the bottom in the water bottle up to about an inch below the surface and WOW! it immediately released volumes more CO2! So, I fixed it in that position. Wondering now if I averted a disaster by not going ahead with the glass carboy...
After reading the OP's post and seeing the unprecedented pressure on my fermenter (unlike anything I've ever had before), I've decided to never use my glass carboy again for primary ferm. I'm ordering a Big Mouth Bubbler and double-hole lid ASAP.
Well, you won't have to worry about them blowing - the plastic big mouths don't create an airtight seal.
i am heeding that suggestion and going with larger blow off tubes for sure.
yeah, just had to squeegee the floor. now i have an empty tap in the bar though. Damn!!
The 3-piece airlocks have a star-shaped restrictor on the bottom of the center shaft. Definitely cut that off.
Sanitized teflon tape on the threads?
The problem has more to do with the way the plastic BMB are manufactured. They use a process called extrusion blow molding to make these. Extrusion blow molding is one of the cheapest processes but using this method creates material distribution problems - specifically problems with the parison formation and the container shape. Basically it's not a very accurate molding technology and any container being produced with this method is likely to have imperfections.
For most containers extrusion blow molding is okay because they are not meant to be used long term and are physically sealed. An example of this would be a plastic gallon milk jug. Even though it's not perfect it's a one time container and has a plastic seal preventing exposure to the atmosphere.
The plastic BMB uses a screw top and plastic "lid" that clamps down. On my plastic BMB the lid is not level and there is no way for me to get it completely flush. In my case, no amount of teflon tape will fix the problem.
I'm not an expert in rigid containers but even the small amount I've learned about them as a food science student makes me shake me head. The plastic BMBs are TERRIBLY designed. Northern Brewer / Midwest Supplies manufactures these things and you can tell whoever was in charge was only concerned about the bottom line. They literally used the cheapest technology available and made a really ****ty product.
So you may be thinking - if this product is so terrible why are they highly reviewed on Northern Brewer and Midwest Supplies? People must like these right?
WRONG!
I posted a negative review of the plastic BMB on northern brewer and they never put up my review. I did a little more research and it turns out Northern Brewer & Midwest Supplies don't put up ANY bad reviews of ANY products. Honestly I'm not sure how this isn't illegal. I bought my plastic BMB because I looked at the reviews and saw 95% of them were overwhelmingly positive and even the "negative" reviews had 3 stars. Turns out that is because they simply wont post a review under 3 stars for their products.
I'm not sure if that practice is even legal (I think it's false advertising IMHO) and I was even more surprised since Northern Brewer has a reputation for being a "good online brew shop". I have found this to be 100% false when dealing with them.
I will never, ever buy anything from Northern Brewer / Midwest Supplies again. Their prices are among the most expensive but I thought I was paying a little extra to deal with an honest company that stood behind their products and had good customer service. In my experience they are a dishonest company that refuses to stand behind their product.
Honestly it's not the end of the world that the plastic BMB doesn't seal very well. At the time of purchase this was part of the product description for the plastic BMB:
"Your wort is protected during fermentation by innovative flared-fitting lid construction, creating an airtight seal between the lid plate and top of the fermentor."
They seemed to have removed that part since I made my complaint a few weeks ago. When I emailed a customer service rep he promised they would "make it right" but it looks like they just removed their false product description to cover their own ass.
So yeah, your mileage may vary with the plastic BMB but I regret not just grabbing a couple of fermentation buckets.
This is worth considering. My main gripe with my ferm bucket is there's no accommodation for a larger-diameter blowoff, unless I create one that would take a grommet that would accept a length of 1.25" diameter tubing. Until I do something else, my makeshift blowoff is presently a 3/8" tube jammed into the base of a 3-pc airlock. While it's airtight and running free, the bucket lid is still domed to the point where it looks/feels like it wants to let loose. Fortunately, I have a couple days off work so I can keep an eye on it.
Surprised we haven't yet explored the possibility that there was a phoenix in his carboy.
What kind of yeast were you using, OP?
DISCLAIMER: I do not, in any way, discount the posts in this thread or the veracity of the OP's claim.
However, setting aside the obvious issues like glass being heavy and slippery when wet, is this a real problem or much ado about nothing? It seems if there was a high degree of risk with fermenting in standard glass carboys then why have they sold (possibly) millions of them and there isn't more substantiated "explosion" claims out there?
I'm not trying to be cynical or "that guy," I'm just trying to determine if I should all of the sudden be more concerned about the 10 glass carboys I have. If it were a real issue it seems the first thing one would learn when they start posting/reading HBT is that glass may blow up instead of NO, YOUR BEER DIDN'T FERMENT IN 48 HOURS.![]()
this was a belgian abbey yeast (white labs)
My post was merely to point out that crazy SH*T can happen. the 3 pc airlock had that little "star" piece on the bottom and it definitely clogged. the bung was in very tight also, but i never expected it would fail to pop under that much pressure (I was wrong!). had i been using a larger blow off tube I am certain nothing like this would have happen.
if someone took away from my post that I had suggested the beer had fully fermented in 2 days, they misread the post. the most active fermentation had passed after after 2 days but it was clearly still fermenting and the blow off tube was functioning 6 hours prior to "blast off".
Interesting. That is not a strain I would generally expect to spawn a phoenix.
Not sure duct tape would stand up to constant contact with water/detergent. Seems like the better solution would be a heavy nylon zip-up carboy jacket. If the glass exploded, it would be contained and the jacket could be de-glassed and washed.
this was a belgian abbey yeast (white labs)
my floor has radiant heat under most of it. where the heat stops the fermenter stays at 66 and this brew was somewhat dormant at 66, moved it to the heated area and it went up to 72, thats when the fun started.
after having a carboy explode because it was clogged (blueberry mead where a blueberry clogged the airlock) and having plastic buckets pop their lids and ferm locks) here are my thoughts:
1) did you lick the floor?
2) i ALWAYS use plastic buckets for primary fermentation.
2.5) if i'm fermenting a big beer, i split the batch between 2 buckets. after major fermentation subsides, i combine them in one bucket for a couple of weeks, then rack to secondary to settle and clear.
trial and error. bummer your beer blew like that.![]()