vk_30
New member

Posts: 1
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« Reply #17 on: April 18, 2009, 03:06:31 PM » |
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I feel the same way: waste of energy to ship water around, and to make and recycle the plastic bottles.
I looked at home carbonation systems and decided that while they work - I've seen a soda club and one other brand, the cost per volume of water is higher than just using a home-brew setup - without the brewing stuff.
I went to my local beer/wine-making shop (morebeer, Concord, CA) and bought a cylinder of CO2, a regulator with upstream and downstream gauges, and a tubing assembly consisting of tubing, hose clamps, and a carbonator cap. The cylinder is about 18" tall.
I've run about 200 18oz Crystal geyser bottles through it, and the cylinder pressure has dropped from about 850 to about 800. Just guessing, I might end up getting 2000 bottles out of the cylinder. Swapping cylinders is $17, though I haven't done so yet.
With regards to bottles, they still hold pressure, for perhaps a week, even the ones I've used the most - I put hash marks on them each time I pressurize. I'm up to 15 cycles with some of the bottles.
A few comments: my procedure is to put bottles and caps in the freezer, empty, for a day, then fill them with reverse-osmosis water, then refrigerate them for 4-24 hours, then carbonate.
Carbonation is faster on colder water, hence the refrigeration, and freezing the bottles seems to kill anything living in them, so there's no tastes from mold - not doing the freezing thing, I found that after 3 or 4 cycles they sometimes pick up a taste after the bottle's been open to air for about 10 minutes, during drinking.
If I want sparkling water right away, I take an empty bottle from the freezer, will it with water from the refrigerator, and carbonate.
I wear safety glasses in the off chance there's a burst.
Lastly, I saved a few glass San Pellegrino bottles, but haven't had the guts to pressurize them - can't find any rating info. If anyone knows the safe pressure for a 750mL bottle, let me know.
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