radwizard
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2015
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I'm getting ready to build my first Kegerator, and have been researching different systems. My goal is to have a two faucet keezer. I have the freezer, and am looking at conversion kits online. But have questions to what actual set up would be ideal for me.
In all the kits they have all the necessary fittings to hook up the kegs to the faucets, but there isn't any that have extra lines to get a keg carbed up and ready while you are currently drinking out of the kegs hooked to the faucets.
Unless I am missing something, my ideal set-up would allow me to be drinking out of my two kegs hooked to the faucets, but have a keg or two hooked up to gas and ready to drink as soon I finish one. Should I get a three way or four way manifold for my two faucet keg? Is this what everybody does?
Or do I actually need dual body regulators for each line, enabling me to burst carb while serving other beers.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I'm trying to invest in a quality system that won't all need to get upgraded - But I don't know squat about kegging.
Thanks!
In all the kits they have all the necessary fittings to hook up the kegs to the faucets, but there isn't any that have extra lines to get a keg carbed up and ready while you are currently drinking out of the kegs hooked to the faucets.
Unless I am missing something, my ideal set-up would allow me to be drinking out of my two kegs hooked to the faucets, but have a keg or two hooked up to gas and ready to drink as soon I finish one. Should I get a three way or four way manifold for my two faucet keg? Is this what everybody does?
Or do I actually need dual body regulators for each line, enabling me to burst carb while serving other beers.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I'm trying to invest in a quality system that won't all need to get upgraded - But I don't know squat about kegging.
Thanks!