abracadabra
Well-Known Member
The theory goes like this:
The gas permeablity of a plastic primary fermenter is of no real concern. Here's why:
if a little bit of oxygen gets to the wort before fermentation starts it is of no consequence because you areate or oxygenate the wort anyway so a little more won't hurt and might help the yeast.
Once active fermentation starts the CO2 production creates positive pressure inside the fermenter so any gas should be flowing outward from the fermenter not inward.
I intend to prove or disprove this theory by doing a primary fermentation in a #7 other plastic container at some time in the not to distant future. I might just try a 1 gal. container to start.
The gas permeablity of a plastic primary fermenter is of no real concern. Here's why:
if a little bit of oxygen gets to the wort before fermentation starts it is of no consequence because you areate or oxygenate the wort anyway so a little more won't hurt and might help the yeast.
Once active fermentation starts the CO2 production creates positive pressure inside the fermenter so any gas should be flowing outward from the fermenter not inward.
I intend to prove or disprove this theory by doing a primary fermentation in a #7 other plastic container at some time in the not to distant future. I might just try a 1 gal. container to start.