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  1. C

    Regualtor shopping

    Hmmm... is it Cornelius that is LH and Micromatics RH?.... or the other way round... or is everyone RH and Corny the exception?.... darn, I can never remember. Take it apart and make sure you have some teflon tape before reassembly!
  2. C

    Regualtor shopping

    Careful - some vendor's regulators use left-hand threads on the high pressure sides of the regulators while others use right-hand threads (I'm still looking for a nipple w/ LH threads on one end and RH on the other...)
  3. C

    Brew-on-premise planning

    Hi - I have a comprehensive spreadsheet w/ P&L, balance sheet, revenue assumptions, startup costs - about everything you'd need for your analysis. My cost assumptions are out of date by about 10 years (I did this business case in 1994 in Arizona.) Send me a PM w/ your email and I'll forward...
  4. C

    Keg kits

    I bought a dual tank setup from him (along w/ extract, hops and yeast.) Good presale communication - usually takes one day to respond. Keg kits actually ship from here: http://www.markpowers-and-company.com/ Shipped right away. Corny kegs were in good shape, clean but missing one o-ring...
  5. C

    Soda

    Yes. Basic principles apply to both liquids (beer and soda) - eg a cold liquid dissolves CO2 faster than a warm one. Recommend not interchanging soda and beer kegs due to strong flavors remnants from sodas affecting beer. Sodas are usually carbonated to a higher psi than beer - in the 40 to 50...
  6. C

    CO2 tanks.

    Two issues: 1) Pressure control. You have no regulator on a PB tank. They are filled by weight and get pressurized to the same pressure as a CO2 tank - in the 800lb range. To use a PB tank then, you need to regulate the pressure down to your 10lb range. 2) Connection. PB tanks use a...
  7. C

    Chek This Out.....

    Reference following link to US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (what a combination!) for home brewing reg FAQ's http://www.atf.treas.gov/alcohol/info/faq/beer.htm#g1
  8. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    There is an operation called "Brew on Premises" popular in a couple of Canadian provinces and a number of American states. It is a retail operation where customers come in and brew their own beer using the store's equipment, then return a couple of weeks later and force carbonate and bottle...
  9. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    Eddalex - seriously? I can't imagine they'd ever pursue anyone, but you never know in this state - maybe you need to buy someone some office furniture (ala Carol whatshisname the former commissioner of insurance!) There are a bunch of other ridiculous requirements in Art 37 - such as no...
  10. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    Found it... 37 Section 505. Found at bottom of page 30 of 118 of this doc: http://www.able.state.ok.us/Documents/Alcoholic_Beverage_Title37.pdf Keep on "boiling grain"!
  11. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    BTW, you can find it in one of the docs listed on this page (I forget which one, if I find it again, I'll post) http://www.able.state.ok.us/documentlist.htm
  12. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    Okla. Alcohol Beverage Act Title 37 allows home brew of "wine and cider". Beer is not listed. I have, in the past, sent an email to ABLE (Alc. Bev. Laws Enforcement commission) but never got a response.... (Walker's correct.)
  13. C

    It's a good day to brew in Oklahoma

    Hey Billybrew - Oklahoma state law does not allow homebrewing...(somebody better tell that to the LHBS in the state!) Keeping it under the radar in Stillwater....
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