How well does it work?
Is the aerator heavy enough to sink to the bottom, or does it float?
Do you do anything special to carbonate? Shake, swirl, lay down, stand up?
Nice job! I just secured the tubing to the gas diptube for mine since I'm too cheap to buy an extra gas post.
bbentley40 said:Ok, please forgive my ignorance on this.. but what is the purpose? Why does hooking the gas up to the gas in not work just as well?
By breaking the gas up into millions of tiny bubbles and releasing it from the bottom of the keg, the surface area of the beer exposed to the gas is increased exponentially. This means you can accurately carbonate a beer in less than a day as opposed to 2 weeks. While there are other ways to carbonate a beer quickly without a carb stone, they often result in excess carbonic acid and rarely result in the exact desired carbonation level.
But you are guessing and have the chance for over carbing, for less parts ( diffuser stone and tubing) you can connect to the already gas in port
A possible benefit to the lid is its not keg specific, so if you have two taps you only need two diffuser stone/lid assemblies
Not to be a debbie downer but that seems like a lot of parts to throw at a corny that already has a perfectly fine gas/liquid post.
I can carb a corny to near perfect carb in ~ 24hours by simply taking a room temp corny and tossing it in the keezer. Then put the PSI up to 55 for ~24hours (no shaking). Then kill the gas, burp and reset PSI to serving (say 12psi). The keg is ready to go and perfectly balanced in the next couple days, but near perfect carb for drinking that day. just sayin'
I do this too and it works great. The problem with any quick carbing option is that the beer is never really ready even after a week on the gas. The improvement from one to two weeks is huge, so I don't even drink very much until its been kegged for at least two weeks. Ymmv of course.
Wait. So you're bottling after you carb in the keg? Why?
My co brewer bottles all of his stuff because he doesn't have a kegerator yet. I came up with this method early on because I would hear Wednesday that he wanted to bottle Friday. So I needed a way to get it carbed and stable for bottling in a hurry. This method is my golden ticket for that.
When a keg kicks I usually always have one in the pipeline I have been dying to try. So I boost it to get in on active duty ASAP. 5 taps and I still wish I had more. Which is silly in a way for how much I actually consume.
Why doesn't he just use priming sugar?
If you have a keg in the pipeline, can't you just have it hooked up to the gas and carb it at serving pressure so it's ready when you are? I could understand if your kegreator is usually full and your kegs in the pipeline had to sit outside of it.
as soon as I keg I hit it with around 35-40 psi for a day, turn it down to serving pressure for 5-6 days, drink a few over the next week, then it's usually ready to go.
My method isn't guessing any more than this method is (in fact it is less guessing since you have to keep turning the PSI up each hour).
I've never cared for the carbonic acid bite I seem to detect for beers that have been burst carbed by shaking or high pressures. I don't seem to get that with the carb stone. It usually fades and becomes unnoticeable after a week or two for me, but I've heard others say that their beer that was overcarbed using a burst carb method never completely lost it.
I completely disagree. As I mentioned in my first post in this thread, you can also use the set and forget method with a carb stone. You've learned your system well enough to prevent overcarbonation, which by your own admission means you're stopping short of full carbonation and letting it take a few days at serving pressure to get the rest of the way there. With the carb stone it's perfectly carbed to match the serving pressure every time, not slightly overcarbed, not slightly undercarbed, but perfectly carbed. This is true for any carbonation level or temperature, and there's no worries about when to turn the pressure down. There's absolutely no way to overcarbonate using a carb stone because the pressure never gets over serving pressure. What happens if you forget or get distracted and it stays at 50psi for an extra day? What if you want to change your serving temp or carbonation level? What about other people with a slightly different serving temp, serving pressure or desired carbonation level than you? Sure they can eventually get their system dialed in like you have, but it's going to take some trial and error (guessing) to get there. I'm not discounting your method or it's merits, but to say that it's less guessing than using a carb stone is ridiculous.