Great post, got me thinking. Even if you ran out of gas for dispensing it should be possible to harness the pressure from an actively fermenting batch (in a keg) for serving finished beers. Split the gas out from the fermenting keg with a tee; one side goes to a secondary regulator and a manifold to control serving pressure, and a spunding valve on the other side to limit total pressure. Would be a great incentive to keep on brewingFrom a homebrew perspective, you can carbonate with sugar in kegs and reserve CO2 cylinders just for pushing. And right now I have a beer fermenting, with the CO2 output routed to a keg (with a spunding valve), so the keg will be purged naturally before filling via closed xfer.
Great post, got me thinking. Even if you ran out of gas for dispensing it should be possible to harness the pressure from an actively fermenting batch (in a keg) for serving finished beers. Split the gas out from the fermenting keg with a tee; one side goes to a secondary regulator and a manifold to control serving pressure, and a spunding valve on the other side to limit total pressure. Would be a great incentive to keep on brewing![]()
I'm really wishing I had another 20# on hand.Glad I bought that 2nd 20lber a few weeks ago.......
One of the last cysers I made and carbed in the keg kept a charge for about 75% of the keg.honestly if i found myself without co2, i'd brew a barley wine and drink it uncarbonated.....
edit: or maybe make some cyser....
I'm really wishing I had another 20# on hand.
I'd go out and buy one today but we're tightening our belts until this nightmare is over. My whole company is taking an unpaid day off per week for at least the next three months and it could get worse after that if this crisis isn't over by then. I mean I can justify $20-30 here and there for brewing ingredients so we don't run out of beer, but all equipment purchases are on hold for now.If you can, I'd do it. The business I use for my co2/propane refills has a kid with an immune deficiency. To maintain the social distance thing, I just did the payment over the phone and when I pulled up, he had my propane tanks ready. All I had to do was swap them out and I was on my way home. No contact, no worries.
I had a 5lb with the intent on using it for just pressure transfers and as a back up when the main one happened to go out on a day my supplier was closed. Before this pandemic really took off, I traded my 5lber in for the 20. I should have done this when I first got into the hobby as a 20lb tank will last me almost a full year.
I'd go out and buy one today but we're tightening our belts until this nightmare is over. My whole company is taking an unpaid day off per week for at least the next three months and it could get worse after that if this crisis isn't over by then. I mean I can justify $20-30 here and there for brewing ingredients so we don't run out of beer, but all equipment purchases are on hold for now.
Hang in there, fingers crossed.Totally understand that. Hopefully this passes sooner than later. I'm off next week for the same reasons, and though it's paid, I got too dependent on the OT I was making the last 6 months. That was a huge cut I wasn't ready for. My company is going to make sure I get two weeks of full pay if it has to go that long (so far one week). If it goes 3 weeks or more, my funds will really be hurting.
No problem on CO2 availability or high prices here in Denver.
I called my local supplier this morning and asked about a 20 lb swap. They said come on by.
I drove down, stood 6 feet from the store, swapped bottles, paid and was on my way in less than 5 minutes.
Still the same price as the last time I swapped bottles
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That's some cheap CO2.
Interesting cross over about CO2 shortages on a NASCAR blog today. Author is tying CO2 shortages to reduced driving and demand for ethanol for fuel.
How NASCAR Can Help Prevent a Beer Shortage
How NASCAR Can Help Prevent a Beer Shortage
- I too only bottle - so no worries here