Keg to cornie adapter? | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

Keg to cornie adapter?

Discussion in 'Bottling/Kegging' started by thabersaat, Apr 6, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    thabersaat

    Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    So I am planning on making a few cornie kegs of homebrew to serve at my wedding and the venue has a kegerator that is setup for commercial kegs. I am assuming they will not allow me to cut their lines and hook up regular ball lock fittings, does anyone know if there is some sort of adapter that I can use? I am sure that the C02 will not be an issue as I can just unscrew that one, but I am not sure about the beer line.

    Thanks!
    T
     
  2. #2
    Bobby_M

    Vendor and Brewer  

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    It would be much easier to try to score some sanke sixtels.
     
  3. #3
    thabersaat

    Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    I would prefer to stick with my ball lock kegs that I already own and get an adapter if it exists rather than shell out the cash for sixtels. I can always just ice bucket and picnic tap if need be.
     
  4. #4
    outside92129

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    I think you're going to have to make one. Everything that google came up with involved using ball lock connectors on sankey kegs.
     
  5. #5
    PapaO

    Well-Known Member

  6. #6
    OHIOSTEVE

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    I am by no means an expert but couldn't you just disconnect the CO2 line in and the beer line out from the Sanke connector and put them on your ball lock connectors? I have a sanke connector set up to switch in and out with my corneys and it is as simple as unscrewing the quick disconnest and switching it over to the sanke tap.....I would think the worst case scenarip is thatthey are barbed rather than threaded and you gotta cut them back a half inch to get em off the sanke.
     
  7. #7
    thabersaat

    Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    The problem is that the Sanke is the wedding venues property so I can't screw with it very much.
     
  8. #8
    OHIOSTEVE

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    Always remember the three s mantra...shoot shovel and shut up lol.. just do it and make sure you know what it will take to put it back to the original set up and have that on hand also. don't ask don't tell so to speak.
     
  9. #9
    thabersaat

    Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    yeah i hear ya, I also want someone else to deal with it at the end of my wedding, so it needs to be super simple is all
     
  10. #10
    Irrenarzt

    HNIC  

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    Do the venue lines have flare fittings or are they hose clamped directly to barbs on the sanke keys?

    You will just need to buy a bag of flares and install them on their lines, then screw flares onto flare ball lock couplers. Not a big deal I would think.
     
  11. #11
    Raenon

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    THIS!

    I was looking for these myself with no luck weeks ago, ended up buying some MFL tailpieces for my sankey coupler, plus more swivel barb pieces to replace the commercial ones that came with the kegerator so I'll be able to switch out. This would be about the same price or maybe even a couple bucks cheaper, and requires NO cutting!

    Just bring a wrench to unscrew the 7/8" beernuts from the sankey coupler- they nearly always connect couplers this way so that you can swap the coupler if you want to put a different keg type on those lines (like an import or certain microbrews that use Euro couplers)
    Just unscrew the big beer nut from their sankey coupler, screw on the above adapter, then screw your MFL disconnects to it.

    You might want to visit the venue ahead and talk to the bar manager (or whoever oversees the bar staff and equipment) and tell them that you'd like to do this, then measure for height (since sankey's are a little shorter than ball locks, and there might be obstructions that only leave room for a low-profile sankey soupler)

    Go buy two of those adapters per keg you intend to serve (at once), you should be golden.
     
  12. #12
    Bobby_M

    Vendor and Brewer  

    Posted Apr 6, 2012
    You'll still have to unscrew the beer lines from the sanke couplings so I don't know how much more invasive someone may view just moving the tubing over to a different barb. I suppose if they are crimp-clamped on, it wouldn't be cool.
     
  13. #13
    thabersaat

    Member

    Posted Apr 7, 2012
    Thanks guys for the help. I will contact the venue and see if they can send me a picture since its a bit of a drive. Seems like those sankey couplers are my best bet.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder