The Tide stuff has detergent in it. Tough to rinse. I have not seen plain oxy clean anywhere for a long time they seem to all be laundry detergent with a bit of perchlorate added.
Me, too. I thought: my flip flops stink!:ban:
But seriously; why use flip tops when caps are cheap? Flip tops have their place I guess, but it is not in single beer sessions. I used to have some, but they went with gifting brews.
RDWHAHB! It is (only) beer, not a nuclear power plant ready to melt down and destroy the entire universe!
You do not even have to be "anal" about sanitation, just good. Wash your hands, use weak bleach solution & iodophor is really good enough in most brewing situations. The huge breweries...
Worry about an infection from chlorinated water? UHH, isn't the function of chlorine to dis-infect? Shouldn't the worry be about the chlorine killing the yeast or adding unwanted flavors?
I have used a charcoal filter for city water for the last 10 years, but we have that other chlorine...
Do you use hot water to clean the glass carboys?
That could be the culprit.
The last one I broke was sitting empty on the concrete floor of my unheated basement in the winter. My tennis shoe touched the bottom and kablooyie! I guess the temperature gradient was too much.
I do have a couple of extra PC's that I found in the trash. They all are capable of Windows10, some have serial & parallel ports. Seems to me that someone that knew what they where doing could utilize one of the super I/o ports easily.
PCs do not have to be expensive! My RPI media client...
Here is a good link to a build your own PWM : http://www.dprg.org/tutorials/2005-11a/index.html
Oddly enough I found it by Googling that brought me to a homebrewtalk thread that had this link in it. I wonder why I didn't think to use this site's search :smack:
Hot water in glass carboy? Last time I even thought of that a disaster occurred.
I put 2 cups bleach in the carboy fill with cold water let sit for a day or two. All of the stuff falls off. Rinse for a few minutes with cold tap water air dry.
Most plumbers will say the more valves the better. If you don't need one today you may need it tomorrow.
If cost doesn't matter one at each entrance and exit to anything.