They would be right. Safety is a big part of our hobby.
And since safety is important, I vote to out copper from the homedistillation process. It has no place here. It is dangerous.
Why? How come? Isn't a copper tube or pipe resistant, as glass, as stainless steel? No, it isn't.
This is what happens in the normal homedistillation process. We fire up our stills, introduce strong alcohol to our copper columns, make cuts, finish when tails arrive ...
We then probably would rinse the column out and let it dry. Nice & dry, waiting for the next round of distilling. Maybe one week later. But "nice & dry" don't mean sh*t to copper. There is nothing nice about a copper column waiting for you to use it at a later moment. It isn't passively waiting for you to put it back to service. While you are working, mashing, bottling, having a drink, raising your kids, the copper tube is corroding.
Copper corrodes under the influence of air. Oxygen to be more precise. And copper that has just been treated by both heat and high abv alcohol ... well, that's corroding even faster.
The corrosion process of copper does three things:
1. It chemically compounds (and all copper compounds are to be considered toxic - causing Wilson's Disease for example).
2. Surface area increases dramattically, thus creating more and more copper/copper compound/product contact.
3. Particle creation booms. Just stick your finger in a dirty old copper pipe, and you will get what I mean.
Copper corrodes into toxic compounds. Those copper compounds - due to the increased surface area - get a lot of contact with the product we are making. And vapours rising up will transfer part of the increased amount of particles over into your destillate. And if it isn't the vapour causing the particle transfer, the copper compound particle contamination can off course also be caused by liquids travelling down those beautiful copper product coolers.
I vote copper "out".
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Odin.