Note -- do NOT put a cork in a screwcap bottle. A big danger is the neck is not designed for the stresses of inserting or removing a cork, and shattering the bottle is possible.
I'm repeating what the vendors say -- if the manufacturer says the glass is not designed for the stress, I'm listening.I have routinely put #9 corks in screw cap bottles. Hundreds of them, in fact. I think the possibility of breakage is due to the kind of corkscrew is used to extract the cork. Some corkscrews (especially the french waiter corkscrew, put uneven stress on the glass increasing the chance of breakage. I use a screwpull type of corkscrew and a floor corker puts even pressure when corking.
As have I. I never thought of the type of cork screw used to open it though. I use the kind also that puts even pressure on the glass and they work great. Probably 1/3 of my bottles are screw on top, so not using those would.make a considerable dent in my bottle supply.I have routinely put #9 corks in screw cap bottles. Hundreds of them, in fact. I think the possibility of breakage is due to the kind of corkscrew is used to extract the cork. Some corkscrews (especially the french waiter corkscrew, put uneven stress on the glass increasing the chance of breakage. I use a screwpull type of corkscrew and a floor corker puts even pressure when corking.
Consider that while you cork and uncork in a controlled fashion, anyone you give a bottle to may not.As have I. I never thought of the type of cork screw used to open it though. I use the kind also that puts even pressure on the glass and they work great. Probably 1/3 of my bottles are screw on top, so not using those would.make a considerable dent in my bottle supply.
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