NWC wrote:Hi Jim - Yes I did that. I had them in the a-c for 4 or 5 days and then transferred to the shed.
Its a puzzler.
Can I try and prime again - will that work?
I wouldn't prime again at this stage until you know the cause. There are a few possibilities as to what can go wrong with secondary fermentation: -
1. There was no viable yeast in the bottles so no secondary fermentation took place (hence the need to be careful about putting more sugar in)
2. A secondary ferment took place, but the gas was lost because the bottles weren't sealed properly. If the beer tastes quite dry, this is probably what happened.
3. Conditions were unsuitable for fermentation (e.g. temperature low, but you seem to have eliminated that possibility)
If it's (1) you would need to get fresh yeast in there somehow - I've never had to do that so maybe someone else can advise the best way to do it.
Alternatively, if you're a corny keg owner you could force carbonate it....