Kay.. I've found a source.. and I'ma make a bottel.. (and probably line a couple of cups and such, as well, so they are water proof, rather than really inefficient collanders).
So.. when using it on leather bottels.. does it "soak through" like beeswax does? Or does it merely line, and stop?
Also, how do you guys "heat" the bottles before lining them?
THANKS!
Brewers pitch?
Moderator: Glen K
I cut my pitch with beeswax until its not sticky anymore when dry (around 50/50) and use it on room temp bottles.
On thin bottles, the wax mix will soak through quite rapidly. I intentionally soak it through, let it cool, then recoat the interior. I find this helps build up a layer of wax inside, as opposed to the wax just running out of the leather. After it cools again, I do a third pass, focusing on the seams to ensure they are sealed as well. After that I will leak test them. With this method, I have never had a bottle fail a leak test.
If I need to heat a bottle for some reason, I put my oven on warm, ~150 degrees, and place a piece of plywood inside. The wood keeps the metal from scorching the leather and catches wax as well.
Cheers,
On thin bottles, the wax mix will soak through quite rapidly. I intentionally soak it through, let it cool, then recoat the interior. I find this helps build up a layer of wax inside, as opposed to the wax just running out of the leather. After it cools again, I do a third pass, focusing on the seams to ensure they are sealed as well. After that I will leak test them. With this method, I have never had a bottle fail a leak test.
If I need to heat a bottle for some reason, I put my oven on warm, ~150 degrees, and place a piece of plywood inside. The wood keeps the metal from scorching the leather and catches wax as well.
Cheers,
Milan
Alesz Milayek z Opatova
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges
Alesz Milayek z Opatova
Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges
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Kel Rekuta
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