kyle5434
Trying to fuse frugal/pragmatic with good results
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2018
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I'm doing primary fermentation in a bucket (with a loosely fitting lid and airlock), and I'm planning to transfer to a secondary vessel when the SG gets to 1.03 or 1.02.
I'm planning to use a 7 gallon Fermonster vessel with airlock for the secondary vessel, leaving the wine there for 2-3 weeks before racking to an appropriately sized glass carboy for a few weeks of bulk aging.
During the 2-3 week secondary, as the fermentation slowly finishes off, does wine volume vs. vessel size really matter? My thinking is that as long as an airlock is in place, the CO2 produced during that period would be enough to keep the wine from being oxidized, whether the actual wine volume inside the Fermonster is 6 gallons, 5 gallons, or 3 gallons.
Is my thinking off?
I'm planning to use a 7 gallon Fermonster vessel with airlock for the secondary vessel, leaving the wine there for 2-3 weeks before racking to an appropriately sized glass carboy for a few weeks of bulk aging.
During the 2-3 week secondary, as the fermentation slowly finishes off, does wine volume vs. vessel size really matter? My thinking is that as long as an airlock is in place, the CO2 produced during that period would be enough to keep the wine from being oxidized, whether the actual wine volume inside the Fermonster is 6 gallons, 5 gallons, or 3 gallons.
Is my thinking off?
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