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Priming sugar in a sanke??

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nctovar

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Sep 6, 2012
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I was wondering also if you could also use priming sugar in a sanke instead of force carbing it. Is this a no no? or can it be done?
 
Certainly possible. How big is the keg and how much beer are you planning on putting in it?
 
I would be very interested in this, let’s just say a 5 gallon keg with 5 gallons of beer.
 
Sure you can. I did this with a Belgian tripel recently; I put a little less than half in bottles and the rest went into a three gallon corny. I set the priming such that the bottle volume would be correct; from what I understand, it takes a little less sugar to prime a keg than it does to prime the equivalent for bottles (which means that my keg will likely be over-carbonated, which is easily fixed by opening the pressure relief valve).
 
For 5 gal of beer in a 5 gal keg you need less sugar because the total relative headspace is less. A lot of people suggest 1/2-2/3 the amount you would use if bottling. In my experience I needed to use closer to 80% of what I would have bottling to get the same carbonation level, but maybe I don't fill my kegs as full as other people.

For only 3 gal of beer in a 5 gal keg, you need more sugar per gallon of beer than you would if you were bottling, but I don't really know how much more. If I were a little more sober I could probably use what I remember from my chemistry classes to calculate the difference.
 
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