Morrey
Well-Known Member
theres a brewery near my cabin that has a canning machine on the counter, the owner told me he bought the canner for $1200 and change. But he told me to be careful because some canners only accept cans that can cost up to twice as much and he has to buy his cans in large pallet orders to get a decent price on them? anyone else know anything about this? I'm considering buying a canner for a nanobrewry.. not sure on (can) size yet.
The AA canner/seamer I bought is a hand crank (I use a drill) designed for 12 ounce and 16 ounce #202 cans, so I think this may be considered a "home brew" machine. The machine is built like a tank and I can easily see this machine could take on a nano operation if maintained and lubed regularly. The can diameter is the same on both sizes, and the 12 ounce can will have the can chuck raised by a set of shims under the base. Take those shims out and reduce the height to accommodate the taller 16 ounce can. Again, this machine is designed for use with #202 cans advertised as AA or Oktober cans.
My last order for cans on or around July 4th was from a vendor on eBay. So you can cost compare, I paid $88 for 256 cans and lids (12 oz) and $99 for 192 cans and lids (16 oz) with shipping included in the price.
My craft brew watering hole uses 32 ounce cans. Their machine is an electric model which seems to be designed to use for that specific can size, so I am not sure if it can accept other can sizes with a kit. The bartender told me this seamer was proprietary and the design was sold by a brewery although she cant remember the specific name...but maybe Oskar Blues? Not sure.
But my take is that commercial operations are using the 32 ounce crowlers when canning single beers behind the bar. They occasionally hire in mobile canning units that do specialty batch canning and those are often 16 ounce cans.