@Krudler to No Stupid QuestionsEnglish • 9 months agoWhy would the NA beer industry standardize on a bottle shape that's grotesquely inconvenient, topples with minimal force, and doubles the required volume to ship?message-square45arrow-up162arrow-down113
arrow-up149arrow-down1message-squareWhy would the NA beer industry standardize on a bottle shape that's grotesquely inconvenient, topples with minimal force, and doubles the required volume to ship?@Krudler to No Stupid QuestionsEnglish • 9 months agomessage-square45
minus-squareMartinlinkfedilink21•edit-29 months agoFrom a European, what does a standard NA beer bottle look like? I thought your bottles were similar to ours, which means bottom heavy and a slim neck.
minus-squareBombOmOmlinkEnglish8•edit-29 months agoYou sometimes see some very minor variations, such as a mild taper on the thick part or a slightly different angle on the neck. But they all look basically like below. Pictured is a beer from the oldest brewing company in the US; established 1829.
From a European, what does a standard NA beer bottle look like? I thought your bottles were similar to ours, which means bottom heavy and a slim neck.
You sometimes see some very minor variations, such as a mild taper on the thick part or a slightly different angle on the neck. But they all look basically like below. Pictured is a beer from the oldest brewing company in the US; established 1829.
That actually looks a bit top heavy.