DIY Beer Line Cleaner

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Thanks for the great idea. Im lazy so i add a fish pump to the system vs the hand pump for about the same cost as the hand pump.
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Soooo, tonight I was replacing a faucet with a flow control. I use this tool to clean the lines every time I change kegs. But tonight when I removed the old tap I noticed that the inside of the faucet and shank has some soft residue on it. It washed off quickly with hot water, sand smelled like beer. (Of course)
The residue gathered where the shank and faucet widened at the connection. I suspect that the flow from the sprayer does not have turbulence to clean at the wider point, it just flows through.
So, check your faucets.
 
I wanted to make a small beer line cleaner for my kegerator. Up to this point, I have been cleaning my beer lines by using an extra cornelius keg that I fill with cleaner, pressurize, run, empty, rinse, pressurize, run... you get the picture.

I wanted something smaller and lighter that I could pressurize without hooking up to CO2. Something easy that I could use between keg changes. I wanted it to connect to my beer out disconnect so that i could clean that without taking it apart unlike some of the commercial beer line cleaners that hook up to the faucet end.

I had heard of mention of people using pump sprayers but hadn't seen a DIY thread, so I decided to try to make one and share my experience
Inline keg cleaning..before the inline carb
 

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Would there be any benefit in rigging up a pond pump recirculating system that would flush the lines continuously for a half hour or so while I'm cleaning out the keg? Or does the cleaning solution work in one pass regardless of contact time? I love letting my kettle recirc hot PBW while I clean up other stuff, takes all the work out of it.
That is actually what I do. I built a keg cleaner with a pond pump and a PVC arm that sticks up in the keg. I put a 1/2" PVC to 1/2" MPT adapter on so I could put different "heads" on the arm. One of the heads is a pipe cam with a liquid pinlock post and I just hook it up with some silicone hose on the fawcett as a return to the bucket with the pond pump in it. Run the first bit to a toss bucket because it will have a lot of beer gunk in it, then I switch the hose to start recirculating. Easy as pie and works like a charm.
 
Do co2 lines need to be cleaned out other than the ball/pin lock directly at the keg?
Only when you had beer back up into them.

I've noticed some condensation in them at times (mine are clear 1/4" beverage line), so I clean them maybe once a year for good measure. For peace of mind, I've never seen mold grow in them, though.

I do not routinely clean the gas QDs, except when doing the yearly overhaul. MFL connections make this all fairly easy.
 
Has anyone noticed a gasoline aroma from the flo-master sprayer when new? I'm guessing it's from the lubricant they've used (I removed the lubricant and lubricated the o-rings Vaseline).

I've tried using PBW and normal dish soap to but nothing seems to get rid of the smell.
 
Has anyone noticed a gasoline aroma from the flo-master sprayer when new? I'm guessing it's from the lubricant they've used (I removed the lubricant and lubricated the o-rings Vaseline).

I've tried using PBW and normal dish soap to but nothing seems to get rid of the smell.

I didn't. Mine smelled like any new plastic container would. Cleaned it and nothing out of the ordinary since. About 4 or 5 years.
 
Same here - no odd smells. Though it's been probably 5-6 years since I bought mine and I no longer use them having moved to pump based cleaning setup (to recirculate continuously clean all 8 taps at once).

Kal
 
Yeah, this is in reference to a new one. My old one fell off a shelf and the plastic nozzle snapped at the metal coupler. I went and bought a new one at HD and it smells like gasoline.
 
Yeah, this is in reference to a new one. My old one fell off a shelf and the plastic nozzle snapped at the metal coupler. I went and bought a new one at HD and it smells like gasoline.

Take it back and exchange it. Or at the very least check if the others at the store smell.
 
fwiw, when this thread was brand spanking new I built a pair of these (one for cleaner the other for rinsing) and have no recollection of the sprayers having any odor never mind anything solvent-like.

But there was a lubricant used in the pump, which I would guess was silicone based due to the opaque white character and lack of odor. As that would be the easiest thing to change, I would suspect a different lubricant may have been used in the offending unit. If a return is not practical it might be worth trying to remove same and using something neutral...

Cheers!
 
Today I went to Home Depot for one of these Flo Master 56HD sprayers. All 10 they had in stock smelled like gasoline or kerosene.
I think I'll just resort to using a spare keg at this point. Though, the pond pump setup is tempting...
 
Sadly, it was definitely not a regular plastic smell, even customer service said it smelled wrong. It truly smells like gasoline just like Teromous said. Looking at online reviews for the product, I see other people have mentioned the noxious odor. It could be a YMMV situation, or it's the new normal. There are other brands/models out there, so maybe someone will find one that's as easily adaptable, but without the odor.

Cheers and thanks for the welcome :) Been brewing for >5yrs but have only been a lurker here until now.
 
I got tired of doing the bug sprayer attachment thing this past weekend, too much pump, spray, dump, refill, etc., so I hooked up a smaller pump that I was originally using for wort chilling. Required some gun decking of sorts, but it worked pretty well.

I popped off the liquid ball lock, put on an elbow and extended to a carbonation cap. Connected the pond pump to a 3/8" line and put a ball lock on that end and connected to said carbonation cap. Hooked up an existing growler fill faucet to the tap that I wanted to clean with a line attached and fed it through the back of my kegerator and back into the bucket. This way..I could just walk away and let it re-circulate for as long as I wanted. Flushed out beer with RO water and bug sprayer, did a cycle of BLC for 20 minutes, flushed with RO water and bug sprayer again, cycled StarSan for another 20 minutes, then flushed RO water through the line again, then left the line full of RO water.

I've got a couple T connectors and an extra carbonation cap if I happened to need to do 2 lines at once, but if I'm emptying 2 kegs at once, I've probably been drinking too much!

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I have a hand pump that I'd like to use for cleaning my 2 beer lines on the kegerator. Having an issue with finding the right adapter between the pump and the faucet-side of the faucet shank. I would like to screw directly in and clean the beer line in reverse normal operating direction. Any of y'all have insight or a part you can steer me towards? Simply put, I have a male garden hose ending on this line that I want to directly adapt to the shank.
 
Found this thread through Reddit and made one of these today for a used keezer I bought off Facebook marketplace. The stuff that came out of the lines was gross. PBW, let it sit for a few hours, flush with more PBW, a couple rounds of water, finished with some star san, and those babies are pristine. Had to use a lot of tape to get a seal, but now it’s working awesome and cost only $25
 
I've never really cleaned my lines... ~3.5 years and a couple of dozen kegs, all duo tight fittings and 5/32" EvaBarrier lines, my routine has been annual disassembly and ultrasonic cleaning of the faucets; between kegs I'll just blow a gallon or so of fresh Star San through the lines before tapping the next keg. Now that I'm dabbling in sours and wild ferments I'm thinking it's time to start a proper cleaning regimen. I bought a bottle of caustic beer line cleaner and picked up a pair of stainless carbonation caps to rig up a jumper, shopping for a pond pump now.

Any hints/tips/shortcuts on using the beer line cleaner? I'm not looking to use pH test strips to confirm proper rinsing, would prefer to just overdo the rinse and follow with a Star San flush.
 
you dont "really" need specialty beer line cleaner. your typical PBW/oxyclean type cleaner will work. if you're using the EVA stuff it cleans so much easier than the old vinyl stuff its crazy. very hard for things to stick to it. i'd just use your existing alkaline cleaner.

as for sanitizing, that's where i'd skip the star san and go with the iodine stuff. 2min contact time and it kills everything. much more effective than star san. so if you wanna make sure your sours /wilds dont cause problems that's what i'd recommend. at 12.5ppm its no-rinse so you're good there. for extra sanitizing power you can double it to 25ppm, but then that needs a clean rinse. so just depends on how far you wanna take it.
 
you dont "really" need specialty beer line cleaner. your typical PBW/oxyclean type cleaner will work. if you're using the EVA stuff it cleans so much easier than the old vinyl stuff its crazy. very hard for things to stick to it. i'd just use your existing alkaline cleaner.

as for sanitizing, that's where i'd skip the star san and go with the iodine stuff. 2min contact time and it kills everything. much more effective than star san. so if you wanna make sure your sours /wilds dont cause problems that's what i'd recommend. at 12.5ppm its no-rinse so you're good there. for extra sanitizing power you can double it to 25ppm, but then that needs a clean rinse. so just depends on how far you wanna take it.
I've been a-hankerin' to pick up some iodophor to mess with. Sounds like cleaning with 25ppm followed by rinsing with 12.5ppm is a solid practice? I'm happy to spare a pint or two rinsing the lines so long as I can keep my wilds in check. Any idea if CO2 lines are a potential vector for cross-contamination?
 
technically you're supposed to do full rinse of the 25ppm solution. if you trust your water, no problem. if not then it'd be 25ppm, water rinse, then 12.5ppm rinse. i dont think you're gonna die if you just follow the 25 with the 12.5, but there you go.

in theory co2 lines can spread contamination but that only happens if you get backflow happening. commercial type sanke kegs have built in check valves so its pretty rare. but corny gear doesnt have the check valves so its definitely happened to me and others i know before. its awkard and unwieldy in the cooler but you can just put check valves right off each gas QD if you're worried. if you have a wild beer that goes slowly, it might be a good idea as brett (and any diastatic yeast for that matter) can keep fermenting in the keg and over pressurize- and now you got backflow into your co2 lines potentially....
 
@tolip_ck1 How did you connect the brass disconnect assembly to the bottom of the Sanke spear? It looks like there is a brass adapter on the disconnect and maybe a black rubber gasket? Could you post a closer picture of that or better yet a picture of the parts?
Thanks.
 
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