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Draw off container.
I've been taking near syrup out of the pan at 216-217 degrees and put into a food grade plastic jug. Its always in the back of my mind that someday the hot syrup will melt a hole in my 7 gallon jug, should I be worried? What does the small time guy use that's safe? Thanks
I just found this, maybe I'm safe.
:Melting Points of Plastics
Different types of plastic have different melting points because they are different chemical compounds. For example, PVC melts at approximately 175 degrees Celsius (347 degrees Fahrenheit). Different types of HDPE, recycle symbol "2," have a melting point range between 130 and 146 degrees Celsius (266 and 295 degrees Fahrenheit). Different types of polypropylene, recycle symbol "5," melt between 160 and 208 degrees Celsius (320 and 406 degrees Fahrenheit). If other compounds are included in the plastic, making it impure, the melting point will be reduced
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I've seen a lot of people using stainless buckets, around 3 gallons or so. They are pricey thru the maple suppliers though, as anything stainless is pricey to begin with. I have seen a 9qt stainless bucket at tractor supply in the pet area. There are no markings on the stainless and I have heard all stainless is not technically food grade. But I suppose it could be better than a plastic bucket. I've always used a 7.75 gal stainless keg with the top cut off with cone filters inside. Even for nearup it helps the filtering process down the road if I filter right off the evaporator. The keg cost me 25 bucks and it's practically new.
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Before I had my draw tank, I used a few 20 qt. SS pots from Walmart. They came with a glass domed top with a SS handle. I only paid $29.88 for them. They were a nice sturdy pot. I just looked on Walmart's site but I No longer see the ones I bought. They worked good. They were sold as a stock pot for making big dishes like a large pot of soup. I do see that they have a few others, some quite pricey, some rather low priced. Check them out. Just realize that if you find something similar to mine, the pot likely weighs close to 10# empty, then if you put about 18-19 qts of HOT syrup in it, you will have a heavy load to carry. One idea might be to just get 1, fill it about half way, then dump it into the buckets you have.
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I should have clarified. I need something with a lockable cover/ lid that won’t move when going over a mile of logging road with bumps and potholes in it.
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Look for stainless cream cans / milk buckets at antique stores, Craigslist, ebay, etc. Many are 5 gallon and have cost me less than $50 ea.
Attachment 18456.
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The plastic 5 gallon jugs that you can get at maple suppliers for storing syrup would work for you. They aren't very expensive and can be reused.
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What Russ said. I think they are like $8 each.
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We use plastic containers, think they're 3 gallon. We filter by gravity through cone filter right into these screw top containers. By the time the syrup gets to the container it has cooled quite a bit so no worries about them melting.
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You can get a set of 4 stainless steel nested containers with handles that hold from approximately 6, 8, 12, and 16 qt from harbor freight for approximately $20 for the set. They come with lids. They are cheap but I've been using them to draw off syrup into and put the lid on it. The lids just sit on top and do not snap tight. I've also used them to create the pig for my maple candy machine. Handy, cheap, and works for me
https://www.harborfreight.com/4-pc-s...set-60624.html
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I do like Chad with the HF pots. If you keep the bottom clean (I sit mine on 5G paint bucket for draw-off), then you can nest them without cleaning out until season is over.