#13 in Air tool parts & accessories
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Reddit mentions of Clean Bottle Express Carboy Brush for Cleaning Carboys/Corny Kegs

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Clean Bottle Express Carboy Brush for Cleaning Carboys/Corny Kegs. Here are the top ones.

Clean Bottle Express Carboy Brush for Cleaning Carboys/Corny Kegs
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Efficient and effortless carboy cleaning that attaches to any cordless or power drill with a chuckDesigned using a high synthetic plastic rod which keeps your bottle scratch free during cleaning processClean carboys and Cornelius kegs without needing to maneuver a bristle brush around by handChamois material is cut to perfection based on our patented design which cleans the inside of the carboy neck, sides, and bottom base extremely fast and effortless
Specs:
ColorGreen
Height0.5 Inches
Length28 Inches
Number of items1
Width0.004 Inches

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Found 2 comments on Clean Bottle Express Carboy Brush for Cleaning Carboys/Corny Kegs:

u/cryospam ยท 16 pointsr/mead

Don't buy a kit! They sell you all kinds of shit you won't use when there are better options for similar money.

Get a brewing bucket as if you don't have a bottler then this will make your life so much better.

Get 2 carboys (glass is best but better bottles will work too). Check Craigslist for these...you can get some awesome deals.

Get 1 Refractomoeter instead of a hydrometer because they use WAY less of your must to calculate and they aren't mega fragile like hydrometers are.

You will want an auto siphon

You will want a carboy brush that fits on a cordless drill because cleaning a carboy without one fucking sucks (and for 18 bucks this is a no brainer).

You will need sanitizer. I personally like Iodophor because it's super cheap, it doesn't really foam up and it lasts forever. I bought one of THESE bottles like 2 years ago and it is about half full even though I brew between 50-100 gallons a year.

I always advocate people start with beer bottles rather than wine bottles. The reason for this has less to do with the bottles and more to do with equipment. The Ferrari Bottle Capper is 14 dollars while a good floor corker for wine bottles will set you back 60 bucks. In addition, it's cheaper to bottle in 20 ounce beer bottles with caps rather than in wine bottles with good corks. Use of a double lever corker for wine bottles should be considered a war crime...seriously...unless you're a masochist who loves dumping wine everywhere and having to clean it afterwards...then just avoid them...they are absolutely awful.

If you go the wine bottle route then NEVER use agglomerated or colmated corks (the ones made from tiny pieces of cork glued together) as they fall apart and will leave chunks in your bottles. In addition they don't age well, so you are much more likely to lose your brew to spoilage. I like synthetic Nomacorc but you can also buy very good quality solid natural corks as well.

Good oxygen absorbing bottle caps on the other hand are mega cheap. Again...this isn't about one being better than the other, so you can use either one.

For wine bottles, I REALLY like the ones with screw tops because they make it nice and easy to cap your bottles once opened. But for all of your bottles buy these locally...shipping will double or triple the cost of these vs buying locally. I get them for 15 bucks a case a few miles from my house...they're almost 30 a case on Amazon or close to that from Midwest or from Ohio (shipping is like 11-15 dollars a case.)

For beer bottles...I prefer clear, but they'll be tough to find locally so I often end up with brown ones. Again...buy these locally not online due to shipping costs. Your local brewing supply stores buy these pallets at a time so even Amazon can't compete with the lack of shipping costs.

u/newtohomebrewing ยท 1 pointr/Homebrewing

I have one and I love it. I've used it for a dozen or so batches and it aerates beautifully. You just need to be careful if you're using a plastic vessel so you don't hit the inside walls. If you do, you could scratch it and leave spots for bacteria to grow. My brew buddy liked mine enough that he bought one a week later.

As hh22lude mentions though, an O2 stone is another alternative that I'm still considering. It would be nice to drop it in the wort and let it do it's thing without me doing this manually. I'm having a hard time convincing myself since I already need a drill for my grain mill so the Mix-Stir is just one extra piece of gear that I already have.

If you do go the route of the Mix-Stir, you might also want to consider a Carboy Cleaner bit (http://www.amazon.com/Bottle-Express-Carboy-Cleaning-Carboys/dp/B005N1ZCMC). This helps tremendously with cleaning carboys and kegs if you use them.

Ah, the list of brewing toys are endless!