Revitalize old rubber vac pot gaskets
I love vac pot coffee. What's not to love? It's fun to brew and the coffee is as good as brewed coffee can be, without the sediment you get with a press pot.
I also love to buy old vac pots, but as pretty as they are, if the rubber gasket is old and hard, they are just dust-catchers on the shelf because they don't create a seal. Without the seal, air escapes around the gasket and you don't get the vacuum necessary to pull the coffee back into the lower decanter. I broke an upper bowl on one that was difficult to remove after brewing. What a mess that was!
I recently ran across a solution for the gasket problem. Go to the auto parts store and get a can of transmission stop leak. This stuff works on the seals and gaskets in the transmission just as it works on your vac pot gasket. Take the gasket off the upper bowl of the vac pot and soak it in the stop leak for 2 or 3 days. I have had good results on one of my gaskets and I am now soaking the others. I don't know if it will work on cracked gaskets.
It won't make them as new, but will soften the old rubber just enough to make the seal. It may not work on all, but for about $4, it's worth the try.
The stuff stinks so don't do it in the kitchen. It's hard to wash off, but the rubber doesn't come in contact with the coffee, so it's safe. Let's rephrase that. I think it's safe, but you decide for yourself. There is a possibility that some residue of the stop leak could get onto the mouth of the decanter and into your coffee.
Please let other readers know how it works in the Comments.
Robert
Labels: VacPot



2 Comments:
Growing up we had a "Corey" Cacum coffee maker... metal top with same gasket.
It seemed to me the best coffee of my life.
Hoping to find (healthy and safe) way to soften rubber gaskets on older vacuum brewers. Not sure I want to try your Petrol product...any more edible alternatives folks??? I recently purchased NIB never-used Cory, but rubber so hard wont snug in properly. "Dust catcher" is right - useless unless soft gasket.
Another NIB Cory I recently purchased brewed thrice before lower vessel broke at rim...rubber too tight? not sure why. Now I just bought a 3rd NIB prewar SILEX and rubber fairly soft and vacuum so far working nicely... 2 brews so far: HINT: to insure seal twist upper vessel into lower, (so says Silex literature), and yes it helped. Unfortunately Silex when pouring drips messily....so I came online to see if I could restore my hardened rubber Cory. Hope someone has a non-petrol suggestion. Also, I'm considering buying yet another that both workd and pours well: Any suggestions on which models would pour without making a mess on tablecloth? I have brewed coffee many ways; for lovers of Strong efficiently brewed coffee, (very like French Press full brew and with fine grinds - excepting grounds do NOT stay in contact with water after brew time and thus do not secrete extra bitterness), vacuums are great - as long as you fill (remember some water remains in lower vessel and dilutes what brews in upper, negligible when pot is full. Also Sunbeam metal/chromed C-50 brews very well and (being metal) can afford to and does have a smaller reservoir of water in lower vessel, thus dilutes less. Pours neatly enough, reliable and automated, with excellent filter design. Brew contacts metal, without any adversity I detect. (I've had/used this Sunbeam for a decade.) (I want to try the all-glass vacuum partly because claims of superiority of clean tasting brew due to contacting glass only, generally no metal.) Not like ineffecient plastic-lined coffee makers of today such as my Cuisinart drip system - which has high consumer rating but still cant hold a candle to superior vacuum pot! I highly recommend later Sunbeam (C-50 better than C-30) only we dont get to see the action! :) Anyone have good idea for softening gaskets? (other than using gasket-less model?) Can anyone suggest model(s) which pour neatly? Salud!
~Padraig Ruarc
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