ShepherdQ
Pusser Newbie
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2012
- Messages
- 127
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Hi all,
I stumbled across a study Daniel Pambianchi did of three degassing tools, and I thought I'd share it. I searched, but didn't see this posted anywhere yet.
http://www.techniquesinhomewinemaki...ent and Its Impact on Wine Chemistry v0.2.pdf
Check out Figure 1 on Page 3. After 15 minutes a rod has removed about half the CO2, while a vacuum pump basically never gets that much out (after an hour in the test). Conversely, after the same period of time a rod has injected 3mg/L of O2, while a vacuum pump actually started removing it after 45 minutes. Considering
I would suggest that 15 minutes is that absolute maximum you'd want to degass with a rod, because of the problems of SO2 removal and O2 injection, and that a vacuum pump maybe isn't the best tool for amateurs because of the time required for it to work properly.
Just stirring the pot...
I stumbled across a study Daniel Pambianchi did of three degassing tools, and I thought I'd share it. I searched, but didn't see this posted anywhere yet.
http://www.techniquesinhomewinemaki...ent and Its Impact on Wine Chemistry v0.2.pdf
Check out Figure 1 on Page 3. After 15 minutes a rod has removed about half the CO2, while a vacuum pump basically never gets that much out (after an hour in the test). Conversely, after the same period of time a rod has injected 3mg/L of O2, while a vacuum pump actually started removing it after 45 minutes. Considering
I would suggest that 15 minutes is that absolute maximum you'd want to degass with a rod, because of the problems of SO2 removal and O2 injection, and that a vacuum pump maybe isn't the best tool for amateurs because of the time required for it to work properly.
Just stirring the pot...