Has anyone tried degassing like this?

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Yes that video has been around for a while. It works but it is very slow and you cannot do with a plastic carboy.
 
Yep....the vid has been around for a while and will work.....but slow. After trying several methods I finally bought a brake bleeder from Harbor Freight.....now that set-up works!
 
If you stick with this hobby the All-in-one will be your best friend.
 
Thanks Thig
I was going to comment on how big your forearms would be after using this method - LOL
 
YES! That is the way I do it even after having stirred. I've been doing it that way for over a year now and was in fact inspired by the very same video. It is a phase I've added to all my wine making that comes after adding stabilizing and clearing agents.

It takes a lot of hand hand pumping, generally over the course of two days, to get the wine degassed. It helps to have a generous amount of head space, you don't want the wine into the neck of the carboy. After the two days all my kit wines and DB wines have been ready for bulk aging with most of the clearing having been accomplished over the course of the two days of hand pumping.

As it happened I was at my LHBS yesterday and along with picking up other stuff I picked up my second hand pump. First one is showing signs of wearing out from all the use it has gotten (about as dozen or so 6 gal carboys degassed). Cost was something like ten US dollars and change. Don't remember clearly but the bung, bought over a year ago, was probably around 4-5 dollars.
 
How many pumps do you usually put on it? How often do you repump it?
 
How many pumps do you usually put on it? How often do you repump it?

Good questions!

When I first start it is usually 50-75 pumps then wait a few minutes for the bubbles and foam to subside and pump again. I'll probably hit it 25-30 times during the first day. Second day is similar but fewer pumps each time, maybe 25- 40? By the end of the second day it gets pretty hard to pump even 20-25 strokes and even though I'm usually still getting a few big bubbles out I consider the pump degassing done. I'm ready to rack off the fine sediment that has fallen out but if I can't get right to the rack for bulk aging I'll not top off but just pump occasionally to keep a vacuum for a day or two.

These are pretty cheap hand pumps and are bound to wear out over time. Very likely a brake bleeder pump would last a longer time.
 
Well I already have a wine preserver like this and I'm only 2 months into making wine at this point. I already spent a good bit of money on this hobby and didn't want to spring for a $200 pump just yet. I just so happen to run across this video while poking around the net. The all in one pump looks very nice and something I'd be interested in if I keep this hobby going.

Does the hand pump hold a pretty good vacuum for a decent amount of time or do you have to keep it pumped up?
 
I tried it a few years ago, turned out to be way too much work for me.
 
Well I already have a wine preserver like this and I'm only 2 months into making wine at this point. I already spent a good bit of money on this hobby and didn't want to spring for a $200 pump just yet. I just so happen to run across this video while poking around the net. The all in one pump looks very nice and something I'd be interested in if I keep this hobby going.

Does the hand pump hold a pretty good vacuum for a decent amount of time or do you have to keep it pumped up?

Early on you need to keep it pumped up because that's when you've got the most gas. Day two don't have to and really can't pump as much because of less and less gas.

Yes, from my experience it is a lot of work. Not nearly as easy and quick, again in my experience, as you see in the YT video.

I would really like to have a reliable, efficient and inexpensive electric pump for doing my degassing.
 
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Aside from the AllInOne, a $25 brake bleeder is probably the best investment you can make for degassing.
 

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