*
@Ajmassa , the oil filled gauges I have used were on liquid systems as milk or oil pumping lines, there is a stainless diaphragm which flexes conveying pressure which is not the best for measuring an atmosphere. A good vacuum gague for an atmosphere based system is the less expensive brass tube. If properly installed on the top of a carboy or after the AI1 trap it should
never get wet.
@RickD picked out a suitable one at $7.29, the one googled below is $4.66, it has 1/4 NPT brass thread to which I add a brass tubing connector from the hardware store,, and this has to be sealed with pipe dope or yellow Teflon gas tape.
https://www.zoro.com/zoro-select-vacuum-gauge-test-1-12-in-4flp6/i/G0044755/For the US market 0 to 30 inches of mercury is standard, a second scale is also standard as KpA for reading metric
* the original post from
@wineview was asking how long does degassing using
atmospheric pressure take? We seem to be off question a bit,
I/ we do not have to use vacuum to degas, vacuum is just another excuse for a toy, ,,, and I have periodically posted I like toys so I have several types of vacuum including a 110 volt AC system pump. ,,, the hand pump will do as well just more work.
* I also degas a full carboy like
@wineview and he is correct about foam pulling back into to the trap. I have done it, make sure to keep it out of your pump! Steve above wants 14 inches vacuum? well it seems “God would degas at zero inches Hg, either we don’t have patience or we needed an excuse to collect toys”. ,,, To
make the toy work with a full carboy I will pulse on and off at low vacuum as five inches Hg. Eventually I can ignore it and let it spin at 25 inches (out of a potential 30). I will achieve a lower residual CO
2 than God using zero inches Hg. ,,,, For all of us, using a floor corker anything better than zero inches Hg is overkill
* Rice Guy likes toys so he has a vacuum corking tool. Vacuuming the ullage out makes it obvious that some dissolved CO
2 is normal, ,,, and it doesn’t hurt the wine, potentially a little CO
2 reduces the oxygen in my ullage which stops bottle shock from happening. ,,,
Most small local wineries have more CO
2 than I do after pulsing five inches Hg for an hour.
Seems a little CO
2 isn’t that critical for making commercial wine, ,,
again this gets to post number 6 with the definition, GOOD ENOUGH is the wine will maintain a few inches Hg for half an hour.