Copernicus
Active Member
I guess it was bound to happen sometime. I discovered my first exploded bottle today. I say "discovered" because it clearly did not blow up today since everything was bone dry - glass shrapnel and all. I have an idea why this might have happened but wanted to see what you fine folks think.
This was a pale ale I bottled about 7 weeks ago. To bottle it, I heated up 2/3 cup of white cane sugar in about 2+ cups of water to dissolve all the sugar. After it was fully dissolved I let it cool and then poured it (still warm, but not hot) in the bottom of the bottling bucket. I then siphoned the 5-gallon batch of beer from the fermenter to the bottling bucket, letting the tubing sit on the bottom of the bottling bucket and swirl around to (presumably) mix in the sugar water evenly. Then I bottled, first in 22 oz bottles and then, when I got down to the end, I put the remaining beer in a couple 12 oz bottles. The BOMB was one of the two 12 oz bottles, so one of the last ones.
Is it possible more sugar settled to the bottom and this last bottle or two were "supercharged"? Has anyone seen that before? I would have thought the method I used would mix the priming sugar fairly evenly. By the way, the beers I have already drank from this batch were not overly carbonated. Any other explanations?
Thanks in advance for the thoughts.
This was a pale ale I bottled about 7 weeks ago. To bottle it, I heated up 2/3 cup of white cane sugar in about 2+ cups of water to dissolve all the sugar. After it was fully dissolved I let it cool and then poured it (still warm, but not hot) in the bottom of the bottling bucket. I then siphoned the 5-gallon batch of beer from the fermenter to the bottling bucket, letting the tubing sit on the bottom of the bottling bucket and swirl around to (presumably) mix in the sugar water evenly. Then I bottled, first in 22 oz bottles and then, when I got down to the end, I put the remaining beer in a couple 12 oz bottles. The BOMB was one of the two 12 oz bottles, so one of the last ones.
Is it possible more sugar settled to the bottom and this last bottle or two were "supercharged"? Has anyone seen that before? I would have thought the method I used would mix the priming sugar fairly evenly. By the way, the beers I have already drank from this batch were not overly carbonated. Any other explanations?
Thanks in advance for the thoughts.