WFox93
Well-Known Member
Hey Guys,
Finished my first keezedr build. I used the Arctic King 5 cubic foot model from Walmart for 148 and bought a door mount conversion kit from amazon along with an inkbird temp controller. Then I talked a buddy into letting me make use of some of his leftover 2x4s and chop saw to build the collar. I attached it using some gorilla mounting tape and aquarium sealant. I think I'm going to add a small fan to circulate air as I get 5-8 degrees difference from top to bottom. I'm also going to insulate the wood once I get my third tap installed. As you can see in the pictures, it hold two kegs comfortably and I plan to put a 3rd 2.5gal corny on the compressor shelf which looks like I'll have to move the CO2 tank outside for that. I'm also going to get some longer gas and beer lines to try and organize the inside a bit better.All-in-all though, I'm very pleased with the kit I purchased and how easily this went together thanks to the help on this forum. When I started unpacking everything, I was starting to feel overwhelmed but then I thought back to when I first started brewing and took things one step at a time. Turned out to be way easier than I anticipated. I carbed up some water in one of the kegs to test everything out and it worked wonderfully. Got a rye pilsner going in next week.
Finished my first keezedr build. I used the Arctic King 5 cubic foot model from Walmart for 148 and bought a door mount conversion kit from amazon along with an inkbird temp controller. Then I talked a buddy into letting me make use of some of his leftover 2x4s and chop saw to build the collar. I attached it using some gorilla mounting tape and aquarium sealant. I think I'm going to add a small fan to circulate air as I get 5-8 degrees difference from top to bottom. I'm also going to insulate the wood once I get my third tap installed. As you can see in the pictures, it hold two kegs comfortably and I plan to put a 3rd 2.5gal corny on the compressor shelf which looks like I'll have to move the CO2 tank outside for that. I'm also going to get some longer gas and beer lines to try and organize the inside a bit better.All-in-all though, I'm very pleased with the kit I purchased and how easily this went together thanks to the help on this forum. When I started unpacking everything, I was starting to feel overwhelmed but then I thought back to when I first started brewing and took things one step at a time. Turned out to be way easier than I anticipated. I carbed up some water in one of the kegs to test everything out and it worked wonderfully. Got a rye pilsner going in next week.
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