Beernik
Well-Known Member
Things are finally getting settled since my move. Part of the deal with my wife on this move was that I could switch from bottling to kegging. So I started putting some rough numbers to it. The options I'm looking at are the Edgestar mini-kegarator or 3 gallon kegs. The costs are roughly:
Mini-keg
1. Edgestar mini- Kegarator - $75
2. Conversion kit - $69
3. 4 x 5L Mini kegs - $46
4. 4 X Bungs - $24
5. Extra CO2 cartridges - $18
Total - $232
3 gallon kegging:
1. 3 gallon keg system (keg, empty CO2 tank, regulator, beer lines, and picnic tap included) - $270
2. Additional 3 gallon keg - $88
3. Fill 5lb CO2 tank - $35
Total - $393
The reason the CO2 fill cost is estimated so high is I'm including a $25 ferry trip to the mainland in it. Whereas I can have the CO2 cartridges shipped to me.
Other factors in the mix: I want enough to be able to brew 5 gallon batches. I have to capacity to brew 10 gallons at a time, but I can only ferment 5 gallons at a time.
I have a minifridge that, unfortunately, is 2" shy of fitting a standard 5 gallon keg.
I am also not the quickest of beer drinkers. 5 gallons of beer can last me a month or two.
I'm thinking the 3 gallon keg route is the best for me to go despite the extra $160. The mini keg solution feels like half-assing it and I'd be worried about CO2 leaking before I get through all the mini-kegs. The 3 gallon route is scalable for when I can get a freezer and go back to 10 gallon brewing.
Any other pitfalls I should be worried about or things I've missed?
Mini-keg
1. Edgestar mini- Kegarator - $75
2. Conversion kit - $69
3. 4 x 5L Mini kegs - $46
4. 4 X Bungs - $24
5. Extra CO2 cartridges - $18
Total - $232
3 gallon kegging:
1. 3 gallon keg system (keg, empty CO2 tank, regulator, beer lines, and picnic tap included) - $270
2. Additional 3 gallon keg - $88
3. Fill 5lb CO2 tank - $35
Total - $393
The reason the CO2 fill cost is estimated so high is I'm including a $25 ferry trip to the mainland in it. Whereas I can have the CO2 cartridges shipped to me.
Other factors in the mix: I want enough to be able to brew 5 gallon batches. I have to capacity to brew 10 gallons at a time, but I can only ferment 5 gallons at a time.
I have a minifridge that, unfortunately, is 2" shy of fitting a standard 5 gallon keg.
I am also not the quickest of beer drinkers. 5 gallons of beer can last me a month or two.
I'm thinking the 3 gallon keg route is the best for me to go despite the extra $160. The mini keg solution feels like half-assing it and I'd be worried about CO2 leaking before I get through all the mini-kegs. The 3 gallon route is scalable for when I can get a freezer and go back to 10 gallon brewing.
Any other pitfalls I should be worried about or things I've missed?