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- Bunghole abstract "A bunghole or bungehole is a hole bored in a liquid-tight barrel to remove contents. The hole is capped with a large cork-like object called a bung. Acceptable usage include other access points that may be capped with alternate materials providing an air- or water-tight access to other vessels. For example a bunghole on a combustion chamber can be used to remove slag or add coal. Bungholes can also be utilized to insert and remove sensing probes or equipment like mixers to agitate the contents within a vessel.Bungholes were first used on wooden barrels, and were typically bored by the purchaser of the barrel using a brace and bit. Bungholes can be bored in either head (end) of a barrel or in one of the staves (side). With the bung removed, a tapered faucet can be attached to aid with dispensing. When barrels full of a commodity were shipped, the recipient would often bore new bungholes of the most suitable size and placement rather than remove the existing bung. Wooden barrels manufactured by specialty firms today usually are bored by the maker with suitable bungholes, since the hobbyists who purchase them for the making of beer, wine, and fermented foods often do not have a suitable brace and bit.Closed-head steel barrels and drums now used for shipment of chemicals and petroleum products have a standardized bunghole arrangement, with one 2 inch NPT and one 3/4 inch NPT threaded bunghole on opposite sides of the top head. Some steel barrels are also equipped with a 2 inch threaded bunghole on the side.Bungholes can be made on the bottom of small boats. The hole would have a small piece of cork (Bung) in the hole while in use by the owner; when it was not in use the owner would remove the bung so if unwanted visitors decided to take the boat they would sink. Used mostly in the Renaissance and Middle Ages.".
- Bunghole thumbnail Foam-bunghole.jpg?width=300.
- Bunghole wikiPageID "828968".
- Bunghole wikiPageLength "3390".
- Bunghole wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Bunghole wikiPageRevisionID "675831803".
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Anus.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Barrel.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Barrel_(storage).
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Beavis.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Beavis_and_Butt-head.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Beer.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Black_hole.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Brace_(tool).
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Brace_and_bit.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Bung.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Category:Containers.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Coal.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Cork_(plug).
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Cornholio.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Fermentation_(food).
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Fermentation_in_food_processing.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink François_Rabelais.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink MTV.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink National_pipe_thread.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Outer_space.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Slag.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Urquhart.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Tundish.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink Wine.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLink File:Foam-bunghole.jpg.
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bunghole".
- Bunghole wikiPageWikiLinkText "bunghole".
- Bunghole hasPhotoCollection Bunghole.
- Bunghole wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fact.
- Bunghole wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Bunghole wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Bunghole wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wiktionary.
- Bunghole subject Category:Containers.
- Bunghole hypernym Hole.
- Bunghole type Article.
- Bunghole type Place.
- Bunghole type Article.
- Bunghole type Container.
- Bunghole type Tool.
- Bunghole type Thing.
- Bunghole comment "A bunghole or bungehole is a hole bored in a liquid-tight barrel to remove contents. The hole is capped with a large cork-like object called a bung. Acceptable usage include other access points that may be capped with alternate materials providing an air- or water-tight access to other vessels. For example a bunghole on a combustion chamber can be used to remove slag or add coal.".
- Bunghole label "Bunghole".
- Bunghole sameAs m.03fgbm.
- Bunghole sameAs Q4997646.
- Bunghole sameAs Q4997646.
- Bunghole wasDerivedFrom Bunghole?oldid=675831803.
- Bunghole depiction Foam-bunghole.jpg.
- Bunghole isPrimaryTopicOf Bunghole.