Sistema di carbonatazione CarbaCap C02 Accoppiamento all'acqua di succo di birra soda carbonata

Brand:Home Brew Stuff

2.1/5

43.14

CarbaCap carbona bevande naturali e conserva bevande gassate con CO2 in bottiglie di plastica. Può essere utilizzato per iniettare o mantenere la CO2 in qualsiasi bevanda. Mantiene la forma della birra piatta o soda gassata, succo, bevande energetiche o semplicemente acqua naturale. Questo prodotto ha sostituito il Carbonater. Cose necessarie per un uso corretto. - 5616 Ball Lock Gas Disconnect (raccordo a vite) - 4990 Ball Lock Caricatore per fusti - 4991 Cartuccia di CO2 da 16 grammi

Bombola Co2, regolatore, tubo flessibile e scollegare non inclusi. Funziona con un accoppiatore a sfera che consente di iniettare CO2 in qualsiasi liquido. Per bottiglie in PET standard da 1 e 2 litri. CarbaCap è perfetto per gasare l'acqua.
Brand Home Brew Stuff
Color Blue
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer No
Item Dimensions LxWxH 7 x 1.25 x 5 inches
Item model number 396-394
Manufacturer Home Brew Stuff
Material Plastic
Product Dimensions 7 x 1.25 x 5 inches; 0.63 Ounces

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Scritto da: Randall Waldrep
A good carbonating cap with a few issues
I bought three of these about a year ago and now that I've used them for a while, I feel comfortable leaving a review. I do have trouble with screwing them on a soda bottle to get a good seal. It seems like you have to unscrew it a bit and retighten, perhaps to get the threads lined up just perfectly for it to seal. Maybe this is an issue with the bottle, but it happens a lot. One of the Carbacaps seems to work better than the other two in this regard. Next, there's the issue with pressing on the ball lock valve. I use 2-Liter bottles. I usually squeeze out all of the air in the bottle before screwing on the Carbacap. This leaves the bottle in a very weak state. Pressing on the Carbacap is much easier on an unpressurized line. If the line is pressurized, you will have to push much harder, which usually causes the bottle to bend, being unsupported by the air inside. The way I get around this is by pressurizing the line and then turning off the CO2. This provides enough pressure to inflate the bottle with CO2 and leaves the line unpressurized so it's easy to push the valve onto the Carbacap the rest of the way. At this point I turn the gas back on and shake away... There's a minor issue of a few drops of water seeping out as I'm shaking, but I don't consider this a deal-breaker. That's fine. Finally, there's the issue of getting the valve OFF of the Carbacap. This is surprisingly difficult. I'd expect the 90 psi pressure inside to just shoot it right off. But what happens instead is the ball valve somehow galls the plastic. Over time, say a few months, it gets more and more difficult to pull the valve from the Carbacap. I have resorted to lubing the Carbacap with saliva, oil, etc. to make it easier. When the plastic eventually gets roughed up enough, it's almost impossible for a grown man to pull the valve from the Carbacap. Maybe sanding the plastic down would ease this issue, but who's got time for that? Aside from these issues, the Carbacap works great. I like making my own soda water and this cap has allowed me to do this for the last year or so. I am going to have to "graduate" now to buy a metal one, though, and see if those have fewer issues.
Scritto da: Half-Mad
With a little preparation, works just fine.
The item I received was good - with a caveat. The circular slot on the inside which is supposed to fit onto the upper edge of the bottle's mouth to provide a seal was a tiny bit too small - simply screwing it onto a (freshly emptied) PET bottle causes it to fit crookedly, possibly damaging the bottle's threads if forced further. There is a solution, though. When using this with a new PET bottle, the trick is to slowly screw the cap on while watching from the side. Stop when you see the cap go slightly crooked, note which side of the cap is raised, and unscrew the cap just until it straightens out. Then, pressing down *firmly* on the side that was raised, *slowly* re-screw the cap back on. Keep watching the cap's level, and when the cap goes crooked, unscrew a quarter-turn or so, and re-screw while pressing down on the side that was raised. Eventually, I was able to get the cap on the bottle - straight and sealed. The goal is to slowly force the CarbaCap onto the bottle, using leverage to keep the cap straight and counteracting crooked strain on the threads. This process slightly narrows the plastic of the upper lip of the bottle, allowing it to mate with the cap. Once a PET bottle has been "adjusted" this way, the CarbaCap can be screwed on to it normally, and it will fit straight and seal properly. Now that I have a few "prepared" PET bottles, this product performs as claimed. It's a great upgrade from my previous home-made carbonation cap, which had some metal components that suffered from carbonic acid corrosion. If you shop around a little, you can buy and assemble this cap, a ball lock keg connector and hose, and a CO2 tank and regulator, for far less than the cost of a S*daStr**m - and with much cheaper CO2 refills. All the Italian soda you could want, and non-proprietary standard fittings FTW.
Scritto da: Todd Tran
Looking for a 38mm neck thread? Keep looking.
I'm sure this carbonation cap works fine. What I am upset about are the following: The standard 1.5L soda bottles have a 28mm neck thread, I suppose. OK, I don't drink soda so I would never have any of these 1.5L soda bottles laying around. However, the description clearly says "this will fit ALL 38mm bottles". I couldn't find any suitable alternative bottles with a 28mm neck, but I saw several 38mm necked water bottles on Amazon, compared to this Carbonator cap, which is supposed to be 38mm. WRONG. This cap would not fit my new 38mm bottles. So I take out my calipers to see which one was wrong, I had already figured the Carbonator cap was wrong. Sure enough, this cap is 28mm, and the new water bottles are indeed 38mm. This cap was the ONLY one that "fit 38mm" bottles so I bit the bullet and paid EXTRA for shipping (I am an Amazon Prime member). It turns out to be a 28mm... useless... and I paid EXTRA for something I could have gotten cheaper, bottom-line price. You wanna call this false advertising or misleading or misrepresented? Yeah, it doesn't matter what you call it, it's just not good. The other thing I'm not real happy with is the quality of the entire thing. My suggestions for something like this, whether you are looking for a 28mm or 38mm cap, go for the stainless steel one. This thing is CHEAP! I've read the reviews on these Carbonator caps being high quality and works better than it looks or better than it feels... erm... no. These things are CHEAP! They look cheap, they feel cheap, and anyone who thinks otherwise have been buying too many China-made products that you have accepted it as "standard quality". Yes, I know... It says "Made in USA". I don't doubt it, not at all... but it seems to be Made In The USA/China quality. This is NOT a Made In USA/USA Quality part. I run a machine shop. I could make this part in my shop and it would definitely be Made In USA/USA Quality. Now I have a useless $15 paperweight... oh wait... it doesn't weigh anything.

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