My 2 cents, when I first started making wine right out of college I used screw top bottles, wine, soda etc to bottle my “experimental wine” . I dipped some of those in molten wax and long termed aged them. It Worked!
The problem isn't can the corks go in, the opening is just a little bigger, but corks go in and seal just fine. Be very careful taking the cork out. Do not use any kind of corkscrew that puts pressure on just a small part of that top, like the typical waiters corkscrew, use one that either pops the cork or with pressure or one that puts pressure on the entire top of the bottle. The glass is thinner than with bottles to be corked. I have had bottles break while removing the cork. Nobody got hurt, but it was a lesson I don't ever want to repeat.We cork screw-top wine bottles all the time, never had an issue--use number 9 cork. I'm not 100% sure but it seems the Italian FC squeezes the cork more then the Portuguese FC so I let the wine bottles sit up for a few days to let the cork settle/expand before laying them on their side.
The problem isn't can the corks go in, the opening is just a little bigger, but corks go in and seal just fine. Be very careful taking the cork out. Do not use any kind of corkscrew that puts pressure on just a small part of that top, like the typical waiters corkscrew, use one that either pops the cork or with pressure or one that puts pressure on the entire top of the bottle. The glass is thinner than with bottles to be corked. I have had bottles break while removing the cork. Nobody got hurt, but it was a lesson I don't ever want to repeat.
Reusing the screw top cap, which gets put on and tightened by a machine. That seal gets broken when you open the bottle. Sorry, that makes no sense to me.The key in using used screw tops is to tighten them! If screw tops were as bad as some of you are touting, the commercial wineries wouldn't be using them.
Reusing the screw top cap, which gets put on and tightened by a machine. That seal gets broken when you open the bottle. Sorry, that makes no sense to me.
Wineries use them after installing a very expensive piece of equipment. They never cork them, which is what this thread has been addressing.
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