Page 3 of 3
Re: Someone is Drinking the Kings Wine (building large barrels)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2009 1:56 pm
by LegoLord.
I love both of these techiques. I'll be sure and use it for future MOCs. Thanks!
Re: Someone is Drinking the Kings Wine (building large barrels)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2009 4:15 pm
by Kevin1990
Lol great and funny moc
I love the technic I am deffently going to try and make this!
Re: Someone is Drinking the Kings Wine (building large barrels)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2009 4:26 pm
by Blue Moon Knight
Lots of techniques here...feeling a bit light-head now...I'll have to try one of these, if I can remember.
It might be a good idea to make a seperate forum for building techniques. It would be a good resource for novice MOCers such as myself (and for the experts who want to learn a few new techniques).
Also, just on a side note (to soothe the OCD in me), not all of these are "barrels." I believe the smaller ones are firkens (used for storing wine); then there also casks (for ale); and kegs (for beer).
Thanks for putting up with that.
-BMK
Re: Someone is Drinking the Kings Wine (building large barrels)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2009 4:53 pm
by melonkernel
Blue Moon Knight wrote:
Also, just on a side note (to soothe the OCD in me), not all of these are "barrels." I believe the smaller ones are firkens (used for storing wine); then there also casks (for ale); and kegs (for beer).
Thanks for putting up with that.
Lovely, thank you. I love that!
Re: Someone is Drinking the Kings Wine (building large barrels)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2009 7:08 pm
by TooMuchCaffeine
Blue Moon Knight wrote:
Also, just on a side note (to soothe the OCD in me), not all of these are "barrels." I believe the smaller ones are firkens (used for storing wine); then there also casks (for ale); and kegs (for beer).
-BMK
In case anyone's interested...
A "brewer's barrel" contains 36 gallons of beer - 288 UK Pints (20 fl oz)
A "keg" holds 11 gallons - 88 pints
A "firkin" holds 9 gallons - 72 pints
There is also a container size of 22 gallons. I have no idea what the proper name for this might be. 20 years of working in pubs and for a major brewer and I have never heard this called anything but a "22"!
"Cask ale" is usually delivered to pubs in firkins. The term "cask" is not a unit of measure in beer production or distribution any more, rather it's a designation of beer belonging to a particular category of ale which continues to develop in flavour and strength after it is despatched from the brewery; "cask conditioning".
The UK Beer Market is measured in Brewer's Barrels, and in the last year was a total of 29m barrels, or 8.3 BILLION pints.