I read that whole sticky and I just want to verify something, since this is my first beer I've ever kegged and perhaps you can tell me if I'm doing it right.
I don't want to wait three weeks to keg using the slow method. IMO, I could do that in bottles which are a hell of a lot cheaper to use and perhaps only take an extra hour of time to fill.
The quick method is what I am trying to use, but I've seen several different explanations of it and different estimates of how long it takes. I'm not doing the shaking thing though, it just seems to be too much work.
Right now I've had the gas at 30 psi for 7 hours, and I plan to keep it at 30 psi until tomorrow afternoon (24 hours) then I'm going to decrease to 10 psi and keep it there for equilibrium. Must I really put it down to 3 psi to dispense each time then raise ot back up btw?
Is that correct?
Also, I have the Co2 on the "in" side of the corny, not the dip tube side. I got tired of having it spray me with beer when I put the thing back on. Is that going to make a big difference?
I don't want to wait three weeks to keg using the slow method. IMO, I could do that in bottles which are a hell of a lot cheaper to use and perhaps only take an extra hour of time to fill.
The quick method is what I am trying to use, but I've seen several different explanations of it and different estimates of how long it takes. I'm not doing the shaking thing though, it just seems to be too much work.
Right now I've had the gas at 30 psi for 7 hours, and I plan to keep it at 30 psi until tomorrow afternoon (24 hours) then I'm going to decrease to 10 psi and keep it there for equilibrium. Must I really put it down to 3 psi to dispense each time then raise ot back up btw?
Is that correct?
Also, I have the Co2 on the "in" side of the corny, not the dip tube side. I got tired of having it spray me with beer when I put the thing back on. Is that going to make a big difference?