SAOutdoorsman
32 Cal
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2022
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 23
Good day to all,
I have just joined this forum and this is my first post so I will get right to it.
In the picture above is a whiskey flask that I've made using as authentic as possible the materials and tools that were available during the colonial periods.
However, I did not initially add a liner inside. Well, a friend suggested I use Brewer's Pitch to line the flask. Thus, I found a recipe and made my own pitch from pine resin and beeswax, and then proceeded to line the flask. But, I later read that stronger spirits soften and dissolve Brewer's Pitch. I tested it out myself after the pitch hardened by letting it sit with whiskey inside. After an hour's time I took the lid off and found the pitch to be soft and smudgy.
Now I've read quite a few threads here and some say that beeswax is less affected by strong spirits. Would it help to line beeswax over the pitch? And if not, would there be a health risk to just letting the pitch dissolve over time and then carry on using it un-lined?
I also have a concern of damage that occurred inside the horn. About a half-inch round piece chipped off the horn inside while I scraped excess pitch off. If the liner were to wash off over time, it would expose this chipped part and possibly leak or become weakened.
Lastly, I did not know how to purify my Brewer's Pitch, I just let it simmer, hoping the turpentine would boil off. Would any residual turpentine pose a health risk?
Does anyone have advice as to my queries above?
Kind regards,
SAOutdoorsman