CDGoin
Well-Known Member
I got lucky and started with this 
It was free.. and I wish I could find more like it.

It was free.. and I wish I could find more like it.
Im in the better bottle camp and use the BB dry air lock system. I do have a glass 5gal and a 8 gal bucket for the big stuff.
Ive been using buckets and glass, but I just received these twins! So, I will be going with these guys from now on
My kit came with a plastic bucket and a bottling bucket. No interest in a carboy. Buckets are easier to carry and clean. As long I hear activity in the airlock I know I'm good. Since I now keg my beer I'm going to use the bottling bucket as another fermenter.
Unless you scale your recipe up to 7-8 gallons and use two 5 gallon carboys.
hmmm . . . I always thought that stuff was yeast. Transfer to secondary a few days after fermentation ends and I've got plenty of fresh yeast for my next batch with no need for a starter.
Be careful of splashing and aerating your beer...it causes nasty flavors. Siphoning is nice and slow...easy to control the flow too.This got me thinking... Scary, I know. Hahahahaha
But, could you use the spigot on the bottling bucket for transferring into a bottling bucket.... Or would that not work by sucking up trub?
Seems it would be easier than siphoning from fermenter to bottling bucket on bottle day.
Please advise. Thanks
Milk crates . . .I will probably buy more buckets, because the glass carboys are difficult to move around without disturbing any trub in them.
I like carboys too, and a bucket is still 43-44.I love my 6.5 gallon glass. They're only around 50lbs full.
I like carboys too, and a bucket is still 43-44.
People say carboys are so heavy, but they forget most of the weight is the beer, not the container.
I'm all in with the PET Better Bottle-type plastic carboys, for both primary and the rare times that I secondary. Even being careful, I've dropped a (fortunately empty) glass carboy, and the shrapnel was scary. Nobody hurt, thankfully, but I had shards embedded 1/2" deep into the hardwood kitchen cabinet doors. I'll make a lot of sacrifices for good beer, but bleeding to death isn't one of them.
PET is light, indestructible, transparent, easy to clean, and won't transfer flavors. With just a very little bit of precaution, you'll never scratch them and they'll last forever. Best of all worlds, if you ask me.