wpt-me
Member
I use a fork to hold in place till shrunk enough.
Bill
Bill
What does a capsule holder look like?Two ways to deal with your issue - a) Buy a capsule holder (cheap); or b) just hold the lower part of the capsule until the upper part is submerged and shrinks (what I do).
Here is a link to one.What does a capsule holder look like?
My capsules are very loose when placed and would not allow turning upside down to put in boiling water.
I get it that my volume is real small but these things cost too much for whats there. I only use them on wine I gift to others. I've never had stored wine corks leak or push out so these are mostly esthetic for me.
Never seen that before. How does it work?
Never seen that before. How does it work?
Two ways to deal with your issue - a) Buy a capsule holder (cheap); or b) just hold the lower part of the capsule until the upper part is submerged and shrinks (what I do).
I just bought a capsule holder today after following this thread. When I bottle the wine I currently have in primary in a month to six weeks hence, I plan to try dipping the capsule covered bottles in boiling water.
My current capsule shrinking practice calls for the use of a heat gun. While the results are acceptable, the capsule shrinkage does not come out entirely uniform.
I had the same issue in the beginning with the heatgun, but with time and patience, I learned and now this is my favorite method to shrink bottle capsules.A heat gun can generate a lot of heat so if you don't have a temp control on it you need to hold it further away. Just got a heat gun and learned that quickly. TOO MUCH heat will lead to exactly what you describe.
That’s what I do tooI hold my heat gun back about 6 inches and keep it moving up and down and around the capsule to shrink the caps. It works great!
That’s what I do too
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