sparky wrote:Scotty vino wrote:can someone please post a picture of a damaged screw cap?
OK, try this for something a bit more obvious..
Wow, never seen anything like that, was it leaking ?
sparky wrote:Scotty vino wrote:can someone please post a picture of a damaged screw cap?
OK, try this for something a bit more obvious..
Mahmoud Ali wrote:Hmm, Len Evans passed away some years ago.....................
Mahmoud.
phillisc wrote:'79 Pewsey's tucked away...bet they are sensational
sjw_11 wrote:Thanks Panda 9D ... To summarise for those too lazy to read the other article: 1) only Category D faults (the most extreme) generated a technical deterioration in the wine and this was 0.6% of samples not the 8% headline figure and 2) even then the sensory analysis did not identify the wines as flawed.
As they say: Myth Busted.
My personal concern remains... this was a 10-week study. What is the impact of say, category B or C damage, over a period of say 15 years? This damage being of a kind I might accidentally cause to my own bottles in transport or moving around the cellar. (something which always makes me a lot more nervous handling screw caps than corks). Not saying I dont still prefer screw caps but just to explain what it is I worry about.
ufo wrote:sjw_11 wrote:Thanks Panda 9D ... To summarise for those too lazy to read the other article: 1) only Category D faults (the most extreme) generated a technical deterioration in the wine and this was 0.6% of samples not the 8% headline figure and 2) even then the sensory analysis did not identify the wines as flawed.
As they say: Myth Busted.
My personal concern remains... this was a 10-week study. What is the impact of say, category B or C damage, over a period of say 15 years? This damage being of a kind I might accidentally cause to my own bottles in transport or moving around the cellar. (something which always makes me a lot more nervous handling screw caps than corks). Not saying I dont still prefer screw caps but just to explain what it is I worry about.
I don't think you can casuse damage to the point that the screw cap loses seal integrity while moving your bottles around your cellar. If you do, you might wanna have a health check
If it happens during transport, change your courier. But in my experience of receiving screw capped bottles in past 10 years, even the worst courier (AU Post, first hand experience, I ran a post office for 6 years) known to me couldn't damage the screw caps to the point that they lost their integrity.
sjw_11 wrote:ufo wrote:sjw_11 wrote:Thanks Panda 9D ... To summarise for those too lazy to read the other article: 1) only Category D faults (the most extreme) generated a technical deterioration in the wine and this was 0.6% of samples not the 8% headline figure and 2) even then the sensory analysis did not identify the wines as flawed.
As they say: Myth Busted.
My personal concern remains... this was a 10-week study. What is the impact of say, category B or C damage, over a period of say 15 years? This damage being of a kind I might accidentally cause to my own bottles in transport or moving around the cellar. (something which always makes me a lot more nervous handling screw caps than corks). Not saying I dont still prefer screw caps but just to explain what it is I worry about.
I don't think you can casuse damage to the point that the screw cap loses seal integrity while moving your bottles around your cellar. If you do, you might wanna have a health check
If it happens during transport, change your courier. But in my experience of receiving screw capped bottles in past 10 years, even the worst courier (AU Post, first hand experience, I ran a post office for 6 years) known to me couldn't damage the screw caps to the point that they lost their integrity.
I'll give you a scenario that happened ... I had a bottle of Hugh Hamilton Jekyll & Hyde Shiraz Viognier 2010... Slipped out of a box and fell onto a carpeted floor. Glass was in no danger of breaking but the capsule appeared obviously damaged (murphy's law says the wine falls at precisely that angle to impact the screw cap). I put it in the fridge and drank a little while later and the wine was fine (similar to Odyssey's experience)... What I am wondering though is, this MW study does suggest SOME deterioration on moderate levels of damage just not dramatic deterioration over 10-weeks... Which does suggest even moderate damage might increase the penetration of oxygen ... so how do you then determine cellaring period??
PS its a cracking wine and I had already drunk bottle #1 and this was meant to go in the cellar for 10-15yrs
PPS we have mostly alluded to dents on the top but this impact had (seemingly) separated some of the little teeth attaching the screw cap top to the capsule ...
Polymer wrote:I have a hard time believing those statistics though..1 out of 4 screwcaps are damaged? and 8% of the wine has been compromised? I dunno...that doesn't seem to fit right with what I see...
Maybe there are a ton of 5-10 dollar bottles no one cares about or notices that are skewing the results...Has anyone else seen this?
I do like the Luxe caps though..they feel nicer and seem a bit more resistant to damage...but someone told me they're not as consistent tightness wise? Not sure..
Panda 9D wrote:http://www.wineanorak.com/wineblog/wine-science/more-on-the-mw-dissertation-claims-about-screwcap-damage
That's that.
ticklenow1 wrote:Diddy,
I'd be shocked if Wynns wouldn't replace that.
Cheers
Ian