Anyone use a carboy harness?

Not a fan of them, they break. When I had carboys I used a milk crate
 
I have one for my 6 gallon fermonster. Don't know how I'd move it without it. I prefer to put it on before I fill it but that sometimes means having to wash the harness if it gets wort on it
 
Not a fan of them, they break. When I had carboys I used a milk crate
Thanks for jogging my memory! I bought a glass carboy years ago that came with a bottled water crate; I no longer use glass, so I stored the crate out in my garage. Perfectly sized for my 6.5 gallon Big Mouth Bubbler:

20241130_151840.jpg
20241130_151923.jpg
 
I have one but it's more strain on my back to lift the carboy with the sling rather than just hugging it.
Instead of lugging 5 to 6 gallons of wort down the steps to my bierstube, I built a frame that fits into my wheelbarrow to hold them in place while I wheel them to the back door of the basement.
 
Thanks for jogging my memory! I bought a glass carboy years ago that came with a bottled water crate; I no longer use glass, so I stored the crate out in my garage. Perfectly sized for my 6.5 gallon Big Mouth Bubbler:

View attachment 30838View attachment 30839
Yeah I agree the plastic crate is the way to go. I use milk crates. I don't use carboys for beer only wine and cider for long term storage though
 
Yeah I agree the plastic crate is the way to go. I use milk crates. I don't use carboys for beer only wine and cider for long term storage though
Really anything with handles works as long as it's sturdy. Just don't cheap out if you buy a harness. Don't get the ones that look like mesh or netting, get the kind with the nice wide nylon straps.

The downside I could see with a milk crate is that based on where the handles are I think you'd have to lift it slightly higher to comfortably carry it
 
Last edited:
If they are glass, replace them with plastic. Glass breaks and cuts flesh. But handles are a great idea, since many of us have bad backs and struggle to lift 40+ pounds of sloshing liquid. Handles can also facilitate using a pulley system to lift and lower them. A cart or moving dolly can help move them too.
 

Back
Top