lutherslagers said:This >>http://www.ritebrew.com/product-p/843672.htm
Or This >> http://www.ritebrew.com/product-p/843662.htm (plus some hose clamps)
Or just move the QD back and forth - that just costs you time.
blarsen71 said:Thank you!
Would I be able to force carbonate one of the kegs if I have another keg on this system or would I need two regulators?
day_trippr said:Yes, you could do it with one regulator - if you carb at serving pressure (which is A Good Thing)...
Cheers!
Just curious, what PSI do you force carbonate at and for how long?
lutherslagers said:Without a dual regulator or a secondary regulator you won't be able to force carbonate at a high PSI for a fast turn around. However there are ways around this. You can disconnect the already-carbonated keg while the non-carbonated keg is force carbornating. There will be enough gas in the disconnected keg to still serve for a while. Or just force carb and serve at somewhere around 10-12 psi. Your specific psi maybe different, but in my 8 keg set-up I find 10-12 psi is a good balance between serving and achieving carbonation typical in American style beers. It just takes longer to carbonate.
How long and at what PSI do you force carbonate? During that time that imam force carbonating, I can shut off the already carbonated keg, force carbonate the new keg then adjust both to 10-12 PSI, correct?
Yes. Or you can hook up the new keg to 10-12 psi (the same as the other keg) and have it ready in 7-10 days without messing around with resetting things. That's normally what I do. I have 4 kegs, with one regulator, and it works perfectly.
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