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CO2 utilization when force carbing?

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LordHedgie

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Jul 30, 2009
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I've switched to force carbing beer (set pressure according to chart, roll keg for several minutes, enjoy). Since doing this, I've noticed my 5lb CO2 tank empties about 2-3 times as fast as it did without force carbing. I haven't been able to find a leak, so I'm thinking one of these three things is true:

(1) Force carbing takes a LOT of CO2 compared to dispensing the same corny keg,
(2) I've got a REALLY small leak I can't find with a spray bottle of soapy water, or
(3) I've got a bad connection that only leaks during the rolling process.

What do ya'll think?
 
It's #1. I prime my kegs for this reason, and also because it forces me to let them age for 3 weeks before chilling and serving them.
 
The beer probably has about 1 volume of CO2 when it's kegged. Typical carbonation is 2.5 volumes, so you're adding 1.5 volumes (7.5 gallons) of CO2 to the beer. I don't feel like doing the temp conversion now, but dispensing uses 5 gallons of CO2 pressurized to whatever level you're using. It probably amounts to about 1.5 volumes of CO2. So, force carbonating uses roughly twice as much CO2.
 
Double is about right. That's one of the reasons I have two cornies for soda water and hook them up to the water line rather than releasing the pressure and filling. The residual CO2 gets absorbed as the cornie fills. I go through a keg of water every ten days or so and at 35 psi, that's a grunch of CO2.
 
Double is about right. That's one of the reasons I have two cornies for soda water and hook them up to the water line rather than releasing the pressure and filling. The residual CO2 gets absorbed as the cornie fills. I go through a keg of water every ten days or so and at 35 psi, that's a grunch of CO2.

You lost me here -- what are you doing?
 
Simple than it might sound. I have a line with a hose connector, a check valve and a liquid connector. When the soda keg blows, I connect it to this line. Because the house water pressure is higher than the keg pressure, water is forced into the keg. The CO2 in the keg gets absorbed.

When I put the fresh keg on line, it chills and absorbs more CO2.

So, rather than starting with flat water, I get two+ volumes of CO2 for free. It also cuts the time to full carbonization from a week to two days.
 
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