

Took about 5 minutes to put together. Works a treat.
Outside jockey box station? That's what I am building it for primarily but may also consider one for my keezer. My rinser comes tomorrow! This is an option. I personally was looking to mount it near the drip tray that sits at the base of my jockey box. I have different idea but this is a reasonable fall back.Why?![]()
What's a good pressure setting?
Haha you got me! That's the first intended use! That's why I wanted it higher and visible.For that extra +1 bonus at a beer fest.
Definitely on my list.
I can work with 1/4" NPT. A little pricey. The 3/8 compression was annoying, I wanted to go directly to flare and wasn't having any luck. Basically my approach but waiting on the rinser. Was thinking of adding a metal bar like the drip tray. The bars can slide under the cooler but my jockey box sits on a cart with wire shelving and the bars slide in between the shelf wiring. A bar would need to be wider than what I used previously, as the shank is probably the same width so timely post by @AlexKay if I get stuck!Yeah, that pressure restriction kinda surprised me. I solved it with one of these:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OKZX4CM
It uses 1/4" FPT ports which were easy enough to adapt to the EVABarrier tubing I use inside the keezer (brass 1/4" MPT to 1/4" MFL adapters screwed into the regulator followed by 1/4" FFL to 8mm OD JohnGuest PTC fittings)...
Cheers!
Yes, portable glass rinser, to bring to festivals, so I don't have to pour my beer into a glass with the remains of a smoothie sour or peanut-butter-cup stout still in it.Outside jockey box station? That's what I am building it for primarily but may also consider one for my keezer. My rinser comes tomorrow! This is an option. I personally was looking to mount it near the drip tray that sits at the base of my jockey box. I have different idea but this is a reasonable fall back.
@AlexKay What did you use for the adapter on the feed coming in? Is that a male 3/8" compression by 1/2" female NPT adapter? I found a 3/8" male compression x 1/4" female NPT adapter. Then I had on hand a 1/4" flare x 1/4" male NPT adapter. So supply line to the first adapter then the second and now I can use an old gas line that had swivel barbs already on it and a 1/4 flare ball lock QD. Or vice versa. I had to use a SS adapter for the second one as all the brass ones I had sitting around had check valves going the wrong way.
Oh you must have had a leftover 3/8 comp x 1/2 adapter from a faucet? I have several leftovers. Probably straight threads as those go on the faucet shank and need a gasket but the male 1/2" there might be NPT hence the teflon?
I was going to let it spill into a bucket so as to not create a mud spot.
This was my high pressure, no contact glass rinse setup at my first field test with my jockey box Worked great!I've been trying to figure a "no contact" option,
Wait, I thought those were only used for drinking from.. and, it would be a long hose to get from my house to a festival..This was my high pressure, no contact glass rinse setup at my first field test with my jockey box Worked great!View attachment 858657
(Sorry friend; sometimes I just can’t resist.)
No, this one has been modified with a high pressure spray nozzle; not appropriate for free flow drinking.Wait, I thought those were only used for drinking from.. and, it would be a long hose to get from my house to a festival..
I didn't say me, I meant my brother..No, this one has been modified with a high pressure spray nozzle; not appropriate for free flow drinking.
Now the length of hose issue is a whole’nuther problem.![]()
Ok now the foot valve makes sense, you were thinking to bypass the plate actuator. I've used portable hand washing stations before where your foot does the pumping. Those are big plastic stations however.I suppose it's all in what you are trying to do.. My club does 5-8 beer festivals a year, Those of us that man the club table tend to be more conservative(?) brewers brewing to styles that can get ruined by the smoothie sours, peanut butter and habanero stouts and the like. For us, having someone be able to rinse their glass means they try our beer, not the last person's beer again.
Having a portable solution to clean(ish)ing a glass quickly, and one that other people could do on their own is appealing. We usually have a cooler of water that can be used, but people also like novel.. We don't however want to responsible for the creation and spreading of "beer flu".
I was thinking maybe I could hook up a "step-on" bike pump to a rinser that someone could hold their glass over the rinse part, step on something, then it would stop..
Also, the portable part. Often we can't drive up to where we will be, and need to cart things in, I don't want to have something huge or complicated just so others can rinse their glass..
My brew club was thinking about something like this for a charity event that we participate in. Just one example.Why?![]()
That was basically why my club didn't build one. We were considering a foot pedal option, but I think the debate about the best approach didn't resolve soon enough for the event where we were planning to use it. I'd be curious if you come up with a final design.I built mine to bring to festivals, but got a lot of crap from my fellow club members about it not being sanitary. putting the lip of the glass on the edge of the rubber that everyone else's beer has washed over.
I've been trying to figure a "no contact" option, maybe with a foot pedal activated switch?
You could mix up a batch of OneStep in your tank. It’s a no rinse cleaner with “sanitizing properties”. It is not a registered sanitizer, so the health department won’t be satisfied, but it should prevent a beer flu superspreader event.I hadn't even thought to worry about sanitary. Maybe rinse with StarSan instead of water? Or a spray bottle of StarSan for the rubber piece between uses? Or a second input, so you could spray first with StarSan, and then with water...
Was it common then that they had glass rinsers? The one I am attending showed blue cube water tanks, which made me think of building the glass rinser. I'm just going to spritz the rinser with Starsan post rinse.I've been to several very large beer festivals. And I mean large as in 80 or more breweries at baseball stadiums. You get a tasting glass when you enter and everybody rinses your glass before they pour your sample. I've never seen a no-contact rinser and never thought to ask if they were rinsing with anything other than water.