Definitely give it longer than 2 weeks. I'd encourage you to wait for 4 weeks before kegging the beer - if you keg it at 2 weeks it will be green, but it will also still be very yeasty and you'll have a lot of sediment in the keg.
If you were to use a secondary, I recommend at least 2 weeks in primary first and then a 2 week secondary. Using a secondary it's certainly not necessary in most cases, and if you don't have a proper vessel to do it in you're best off just leaving it in the original bucket for the whole 4 weeks. The extra time gives the yeast and trub more of a chance to settle out, making for clearer beer and less sediment in the keg (or bottle) - not to mention the aging time to clean up the flavors. It really makes a huge difference in the quality of the beer.
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"If you're gonna be an ape, be a hairy one" - Spyder
Primary 2: Edwort's Robust Porter
Secondary 1: LW Pale Ale
Secondary 1: Blackened Soul RIS
Kegged: Dead Guy Ale
Kegged: Rye Pale Ale
Kegged: Haus Pale Ale
Kegged: Nut Brown Ale
Kegged: Afrikan Amber
Kegged: Jock Scott Ale
Kegged: Afrikan Amber
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