This is a varied hobby, so one size does not fit all. But I prefer the discuss the best possible methods so people know the pinnacle approach instead of only hearing about the convenient approach which then becomes standard practice. This is very common in the homebrew world. This imho applies to new brewers even more as why not learn the gold standard instead of other ways which lead to other outcomes.
I recently set up a keg purging approach to my cold side. This entailed drilling a hole in my wine fridge and running an EVA Barrier tube out of the fridge. That tube is connected to my keg for that batch which is then connected to a spunding valve. The keg gets purged during fermentation and pressurized when the beer is spunded. All of this is controlled by turning the spunding valve! Could not get any easier and I am kicking myself for not knowing about/doing this many years ago. Both the fermenter and keg are at the same pressure so pressure transfers are just hooking up a closed loop and letting gravity take care of the rest.
If a new brewer was told about this or shown, it would be their standard practice going forward. It is easy, uses free, natural CO2 and keeps O2 away from your product. The O2 thing can be dismissed but it is the focus of the professional brewing world. No way around it, the beers are better if O2 is kept away from them.
I recently set up a keg purging approach to my cold side. This entailed drilling a hole in my wine fridge and running an EVA Barrier tube out of the fridge. That tube is connected to my keg for that batch which is then connected to a spunding valve. The keg gets purged during fermentation and pressurized when the beer is spunded. All of this is controlled by turning the spunding valve! Could not get any easier and I am kicking myself for not knowing about/doing this many years ago. Both the fermenter and keg are at the same pressure so pressure transfers are just hooking up a closed loop and letting gravity take care of the rest.
If a new brewer was told about this or shown, it would be their standard practice going forward. It is easy, uses free, natural CO2 and keeps O2 away from your product. The O2 thing can be dismissed but it is the focus of the professional brewing world. No way around it, the beers are better if O2 is kept away from them.