It may be that their definition of "premium" differs from yours and mine ...it said "premium". Well, I will replace them with Nomacorc. Never had problem with them.
Not sure what your process is, but you should leave your bottles standing for a few days after bottling. The process of inserting the cork puts some pressure in the bottle, which comes back out through the cork. If your bottles are on their side while this occurs, it’ll push liquid out instead of air as the pressure equalizes.I bought 30 #9 corks from FastRack and I bottled about 25 bottles of Skeeter Pee that aging in the carboy for 5 months. A few days after bottling I noticed leaking in about 6-8 bottles. This is only the 2nd time I use natural corks. I bottled over a 1000 bottles but only Nomacorc. Is it normal?
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It may just be the photo, but they appear to be "agglomerated" corks and not "natural" corks. Agglomerated corks are molded ground natural cork mixed with a binder. The process and quality vary significantly from supplier to supplier. Natural corks are a "plug" taken from a sheet of the bark of a cork tree (Quercus suber). These also vary in quality depending on the density of the bark.it said "premium". Well, I will replace them with Nomacorc. Never had problem with them.
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