Capacities of brewery casks were formerly measured and standardised according to a specific system of English units, which was originally based on the ale gallon of exactly 282 cubic inches (4.621152048 L) (or exactly 1+17/77 US gallons).
With the adoption of the imperial system in the United Kingdom and its colonies in 1824, these units were redefined in terms of the slightly smaller imperial gallon (of exactly 4.54609 L; 1.20095 US gal): the older units continued in use in the United States.
Historically, the terms beer and ale referred to distinct brews.[nb 1] From the mid-15th century until 1803 in Britain, "ale" casks and "beer" casks differed in the number of gallons they contained.
The beer tun is equal to double the size of a butt: it is therefore exactly 981.95544 litres or approximately 34.67743 cubic feet.[nb 2] [2] This unit is exactly 1/35 larger than the wine tun.
The butt of beer is equal to half a tun or two hogsheads, and is therefore exactly 490.97772 litres or approximately 17.33871 cubic feet.[nb 2] This unit is exactly 1/35 larger than the wine pipe or butt.
The puncheon of beer is equal to 1/3 of a tun, 2/3 of a butt or 1+1/3 hogsheads, and is therefore exactly 327.31848 litres or approximately 11.55914 cubic feet.[nb 2] This unit is exactly 1/35 larger than the wine puncheon.
The hogshead of beer and ale is equal to a quarter of a tun, half a butt, or three kilderkins. This unit is exactly 1/35 larger than the wine hogshead.
The barrel of beer or ale is equal to two kilderkins or 2/3 of a beer or ale hogshead. This unit is exactly 13/35 larger than the wine barrel, and is also exactly 1/35 larger than the wine tierce.
The kilderkin (from the Dutch for "small cask") is equal to half a barrel or two firkins.
This unit is exactly 13/35 larger than a wine kilderkin (half of a wine barrel or 1/16 of a wine tun, i.e. 13.125 imperial gallons or 15.75 US gallons), and is also exactly 20% larger than a rundlet.
The kilderkin is the unit of choice of CAMRA, the Campaign for Real Ale, for calculating beer quantities for beer festivals in the UK. Ales are usually delivered in firkins, while cider and other drinks are usually in boxes, bottles or other containers measured in gallons or litres, and all (except wine) are sold in pints or parts thereof. For CAMRA internal accounting, all are calculated in kilderkins. A kilderkin is a 144 pint container but there is not 144 pints of cask conditioned consumable beer in a kilderkin (see Firkins below for explanation).
The ale or beer firkin (from Middle Dutch vierdekijn meaning "fourth") is a quarter of an ale or beer barrel or half a kilderkin.
Casks in this size (themselves called firkins) are the most common container for cask ale.
This unit is exactly 13/35 larger than a wine firkin (one-quarter of a wine barrel or 1/32 of a wine tun, i.e. 6.5625 imperial gallons or 7.875 US gallons), though firkin was also used as a name for the much larger wine puncheon (70 imperial gallons or 84 US gallons).
Most English cask conditioned beer bought by publicans is delivered in 72 pint containers (i.e. a firkin), but the volume of consumable beer in the container is far lower. For example a 72 pint container of Greene King IPA currently only has 66 "full" pints of consumable beer that can be sold or drunk: the other 6 pints are sediment, finings, beer stone, hops, proteins or less than an imperial measure and therefore not consumable or saleable. HMRC does not charge duty on any portion of beer that cannot be consumed, and brewers should make a declaration to the first customer (i.e. publican) to inform them what are the actual duty paid contents of the beer so customers are fully aware of how much is being sold to them.[3]
A pin is equal to half a firkin, and is therefore exactly 20.457405 litres[nb 2] or approximately 0.722446 cubic feet.
This unit is exactly 13/35 larger than a wine pin (one-eighth of a wine barrel or 1/64 of a wine tun, i.e. 3.28125 imperial gallons or 3.9375 US gallons).
Plastic versions of these casks are known as "polypins" and are popular in homebrewing, the off-trade (deliveries for home consumption), and at beer festivals where non-standard beers are sold.
Originally, a 282 cubic inch ale or beer gallon was used. With the adoption of the imperial system in the United Kingdom and its colonies, the system was redefined in terms of the imperial gallon from 1824.
gallon | firkin | kilderkin | barrel | hogshead | Year designated | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | hogsheads | |||||
1 | 1+1⁄2 | barrels | ||||
1 | 2 | 3 | kilderkins | |||
1 | 2 | 4 | 6 | firkins | ||
1 | 8 | 16 | 32 | 48 | ale gallons | (1454) |
= 4.621 L | = 36.97 L | = 73.94 L | = 147.9 L | = 221.8 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | beer gallons | |
= 4.621 L | = 41.59 L | = 83.18 L | = 166.4 L | = 249.5 L | ||
1 | 8+1⁄2 | 17 | 34 | 51 | ale gallons | 1688 |
= 4.621 L | = 39.28 L | = 78.56 L | = 157.1 L | = 235.7 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | ale gallons | 1803 |
= 4.621 L | = 41.59 L | = 83.18 L | = 166.4 L | = 249.5 L | ||
1 | 9 | 18 | 36 | 54 | imperial gallons | 1824 |
= 4.546 L | = 40.91 L | = 81.83 L | = 163.7 L | = 245.5 L |