coh
Member
Hey everyone, i've been reading these forums for a little while and have really gained a lot of good advice from the posts. Also, I must say I have attempted to post this thread MANY times, but always get caught up reading other threads such as the "post your kegerator" thread and before I know it, I've spent hours on here drooling over other people's setups 
Anyways, I had a question about keg transportation. Currently I live out of state and brewed up a porter that is resting in secondary. I am trying to keep it in secondary as long as possible but at the end of the month, I will have to move back to Georgia and, one way or another, this beer is coming with me. I know moving beer is a sticky situation no matter how you do it, but I wanted some experienced advice as to what my best options were. The way I see it, I have a few options:
1) Leave the beer in secondary, drive back to Atlanta, and keg it very soon after I get back
2) Keg the beer, force carbonate, then drive back and let it sit for a few days before tapping it
3) Start force carbonation the day I move and drive back with the CO2 tank connected to the keg.
Now, the only reason I suggested option 3 is because I read you are supposed to shake the keg around while force carbing. What better way to do this than driving at top speed and hitting a few bumps? At the same time, though, I could see how trying to carbonate your keg and drive at highway speeds may get a little....dangerous? (also very sketchy if I were to get pulled over, haha). You are welcome to flame away at the fact that I even suggested that.
Any help?

Anyways, I had a question about keg transportation. Currently I live out of state and brewed up a porter that is resting in secondary. I am trying to keep it in secondary as long as possible but at the end of the month, I will have to move back to Georgia and, one way or another, this beer is coming with me. I know moving beer is a sticky situation no matter how you do it, but I wanted some experienced advice as to what my best options were. The way I see it, I have a few options:
1) Leave the beer in secondary, drive back to Atlanta, and keg it very soon after I get back
2) Keg the beer, force carbonate, then drive back and let it sit for a few days before tapping it
3) Start force carbonation the day I move and drive back with the CO2 tank connected to the keg.
Now, the only reason I suggested option 3 is because I read you are supposed to shake the keg around while force carbing. What better way to do this than driving at top speed and hitting a few bumps? At the same time, though, I could see how trying to carbonate your keg and drive at highway speeds may get a little....dangerous? (also very sketchy if I were to get pulled over, haha). You are welcome to flame away at the fact that I even suggested that.
Any help?