Equipment & Setup
Fermenters Compared
Buckets, carboys, conicals, and pressure-rated vessels.
Choosing a Fermenter
The fermenter is where wort becomes beer. Each type has tradeoffs in cost, convenience, durability, and functionality. Here is a comprehensive comparison.
Plastic Bucket (6.5 gallon)
Pros: Cheapest option ($10-15). Lightweight. Easy to clean. Wide opening for access. Available everywhere.
Cons: Scratches harbor bacteria (replace periodically). Slightly oxygen-permeable (fine for short fermentations). Not transparent — no visual monitoring. Light can penetrate white or translucent plastic.
Best for: Beginners, extract brewing, beers fermented and packaged within 2-4 weeks.
Glass Carboy (5-6.5 gallon)
Pros: Impermeable to oxygen. Transparent for monitoring fermentation. Non-reactive. Does not scratch. Lasts indefinitely.
Cons: Heavy (13 lbs empty, 50+ lbs full). Breakable — a catastrophic failure risk when wet and slippery. Narrow neck makes cleaning difficult. No easy access for dry hopping or sampling.
Best for: Brewers who want visual monitoring and oxygen impermeability for longer aging.
PET Plastic Carboy (Better Bottle)
Pros: Lightweight. Shatterproof. Transparent. Less oxygen-permeable than buckets.
Cons: Still scratches over time. Narrower neck than a bucket. More permeable than glass.
Best for: A compromise between bucket convenience and carboy visibility.
Stainless Steel Conical Fermenter
Pros: Professional-grade. Cone bottom allows easy yeast harvesting. Sanitary ports for sampling, temperature probes, and dump valves. Durable for decades. Fully oxygen-impermeable.
Cons: Expensive ($200-800+). Heavy. Overkill for beginners.
Best for: Serious homebrewers and those planning to keg, harvest yeast, or brew frequently.
Pressure-Rated Fermenter (Fermzilla, Spike Flex+)
Pros: Enables pressurized fermentation and spunding. Closed transfers without oxygen exposure. Can self-carbonate beer during fermentation. Some are transparent for monitoring.
Cons: More expensive ($100-400). Requires a spunding valve and gas connections. More complex workflow.
Best for: Advanced brewers focused on oxygen reduction, spunding, and lager-style fermentation at ale temperatures.
The Practical Choice
Start with a bucket. Upgrade to a PET carboy or stainless conical when you are ready for better oxygen management and yeast harvesting. Add a pressure-rated fermenter when you want to explore spunding and closed transfers.
More in this series
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