On second sober thought, you are right it's not worth it. However I still don't understand why most think that it is risky to open and top up a keg, when have to do that will I fill it the first time? I am missing something? is it riskier once it's carbonated for some reason?
Thanks
If you're drinking it soon, there's no contamination concern; after all, people fill growlers that way all the time.
If you're drinking it soon, oxidation probably won't have had much time to create off-flavors either.
But like others above, I can't see why you'd do this. Did you promise to bring a full keg? And if you add anything else, it's a Frankenstein brew, no longer something that is definitively YOUR beer.
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And as far as opening the keg to fill it in the first place, many of us have moved away from that approach to a closed-transfer system into a keg that has been purged of air. Oxygen is the enemy of beer, and keeping it away from beer is job #1 once fermentation is complete. Those who bottle with priming sugar have yeast that consume oxygen in the bottle, but kegging doesn't have that (unless you condition/carb as if it were a big bottle).
To purge a keg, fill it with star-san. Attach a gas line, and let it bubble up from the bottom until the bubbles fill the headspace and allow the lid to be immersed in the bubbles. Attach the lid, and now you have a keg full of Star-san and no air (the bubbles have CO2 in them--but be careful how much you add when "bubbling" as too great a volume of CO2 will gush the star-san out of the keg mouth).
Then, push the Star-san out of the keg w/ CO2 using a jumper to move it to another keg, or similar to move it to a 5-gallon bucket to save for next time. This replaces the star-san with CO2, and now you have a purged keg. No air. Then rack/drain your fermenter into it while opening the PRV to allow the gas to escape. Voila! Good beer in purged keg.
Two pics, one showing how I did that from a plastic fermenter (the gas line is taking the CO2 pushed out by the beer and feeding it back into the fermenter so no air is entering the fermenter), the other how I do a pressure transfer from my Spike conical.