cmuench
Well-Known Member
So the 1/4" inlet comes with 1/4" outlet as well?
Yes. This is what I have as well.
So the 1/4" inlet comes with 1/4" outlet as well?
So the 1/4" inlet comes with 1/4" outlet as well?
There are many ways to clean. I use a sump pump in a bucket as a recirculating set-up. First I rinse out the keg using a drinking water hose hooked up to an outdoor spigot to get the big chunks of krausen and yeast out. Then a hot (120F) tap water recirc rinse with the pump. Then a 15 minute recirc wash with 2.5% w/v caustic (scrubbing with a brush half way through). Then a recirc rinse with cold tap water and finally a recirc rinse with saniclean.
Does filtering impact conditioning in the keg? I just filtered a beer that had been in primary for two weeks, then about five days of crash cooling. It tastes astringent to me now. Not sure if filtering impacts flavors improving in the keg.
Thanks guys, where did you get that brush? Looks pretty heavy duty.
So, the orange carboy caps that you guys use for your airlock on sanke kegs. The orange cap I bought had a spot for a airlock and a spot for a racking cane. The racking cane tube has a little plastic cover on it and i lost it. Is there something else I can use to replace it?
Maybe it is the filter. It is on the cheaper side for such a tight filtration, maybe I need to up the bucks and get another one. Then again, it may be that I am using the filter post filtration to run the beer to the tap and it is full or something. As soon as I move and get my stuff re-setup, I will try my kegs without the filter on the taps. Keg to keg filtration only should be a good enough test to see if my problem is as simple as that.
Wort, did you ever get another filter? I'm not sure what to buy. Gonna try a disposable one at 1 micron to see if I note any difference between that and my first experience.
I brewed up 10 gallons of a kolsch last night with a nice, big starter. There was no pressure this morning when I left. I thought I had the spund valve wide open, well, whoops. It was closed. Came home later and found the pressure at 45 psi!!
I'm slowly bleeding the pressure down. Hopefully this won't harm the beer too much. Anyone with experience with pressure this high?
Time for a homebrew.
I accidentally got mine to 60 psi one time which is the max recommended pressure for a sankey. It took me 4 hours to slowly depressurize back down to 0. The beer/yeast were fine.
Keg Bomb Kolsch!! :rockin:
cmuench said:I accidentally got mine to 60 psi one time which is the max recommended pressure for a sankey. It took me 4 hours to slowly depressurize back down to 0. The beer/yeast were fine.
Keg Bomb Kolsch!! :rockin:
How do you slowly do that?
Warning! This kit is designed to convert an American Sanke keg into a very nice stainless steel fermeter. This kit is NOT DESIGNED TO HOLD PRESSURE! Please be aware that THERE IS NO PRESSURE RELIEF VALVE in the cap. Do not use any hose or tubing clamps on any of the tube connections or an unsafe amount of pressure could build in the fermenter during fermentation.
This is just another reason I use the normal keg stuff. I think his is just a disclaimer for legal issues, and I believe his will hold up to the pressures. He has a nice setup for sale! How have you had problems with snap rings failing? They are supposed to hold up on kegs that are already carbonated (and even on kegs that have heated up after being carbonated which are at a much greater than normal pressure). Curious, so please let us know.
Wanted to show everyone my closed system fermentation rig. Maybe a little overkill but so far I've had great success.
I found the the perlick lo-boy taps have a 1/8" NPT hose barbs with can be unscrewed and replaced with hard mount connections.
*edit: resize image