kvh
Well-Known Member
Ok, so I just bought a kegerator, and it can hold 3 cornies. I'm currently RE-waterproofing the thing (see the other thread) and modifying the tower, etc etc etc.
I have a little extra money to play with in the next few weeks, and I believe that if I'm going to convert this, I'm going to do it properly. That said, I'm not Scrooge McDuck with expendable income - I want to do it right... on a budget.
Here's my question. I'd like the option to keg and serve beers at different CO2 levels. I'm fine with doing the math and adjusting the sugar (actually, spiece) levels to accomodate the style-specific carbonation, but is all of this silly without having separate regulators, one per keg?
I've never kegged before, but if I had to guess, I'd say that if you had 3 kegs with different carbonation levels and a single regulator and a gas-line splitter for the 3 kegs, all the CO2 levels would eventually equalize, and your efforts lost... no?
Is it even worth it to run a multi-regulator setup? Does anyone notice? Do you??
I'll have more questions later, don't worry...
thanks.
kvh
I have a little extra money to play with in the next few weeks, and I believe that if I'm going to convert this, I'm going to do it properly. That said, I'm not Scrooge McDuck with expendable income - I want to do it right... on a budget.
Here's my question. I'd like the option to keg and serve beers at different CO2 levels. I'm fine with doing the math and adjusting the sugar (actually, spiece) levels to accomodate the style-specific carbonation, but is all of this silly without having separate regulators, one per keg?
I've never kegged before, but if I had to guess, I'd say that if you had 3 kegs with different carbonation levels and a single regulator and a gas-line splitter for the 3 kegs, all the CO2 levels would eventually equalize, and your efforts lost... no?
Is it even worth it to run a multi-regulator setup? Does anyone notice? Do you??
I'll have more questions later, don't worry...
thanks.
kvh