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Transfer From Fermenter to Keg - Your Method?

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What Method Do You Use to Transfer From Fermenter to Keg?

  • Purge keg with C02 & transfer from fermenter to keg using a hose connected to spigot on fermenter

  • Purge keg with C02 & rack from fermenter to keg via siphon/racking cane

  • Use C02 to transfer beer via a closed system

  • Other


Results are only viewable after voting.

Jiffster

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I'm preparing to fill my first keg with a brew and I'm trying to decide which method I want to use to transfer the beer. I thought a poll to see how others are doing it might help me decide which way to go.

I listed 4 choices (one being "Other")

Purge keg with C02 & transfer from fermenter to keg using a hose connected to spigot on fermenter.

Purge keg with C02 & rack from fermenter to keg via siphon/racking cane

Use C02 to transfer beer via a closed system

Other
 
I just started a new process that I am pretty pumped about.

I am purging my kegs with CO2 by filling them with StarSan and then using CO2 to push it out into the next keg.

My fermenters are 60L Speidels. I put a spigot on the top with a CO2 line connected. I use that to push the beer out of the lower spigot and into the Out-side of the keg using a disconnect. The PRV is open while doing this to allow the CO2 to vent out of the keg as it is displaced with beer.

I keep the kegs on a scale so I know when they are full.
 
Gravity drain to a purged keg via my conicals. I want to eventually setup a spundling valve and do it all completely closed-system but for now I'm too cheap and lazy to do it.
 
Autosiphon to keg beer post, which gets the beer to the bottom of the keg with no turbulence at all. I used to purge the kegs first, but I've found that it isn't necessary, so I do the transfer and THEN purge the 1" or 2" of headspace when finished.

I've done the closed-system with CO2 transfers, but it was a bit of a hassle for me since I'm fermenting in carboys. For those fermenting in kegs or conicals, probably the ideal method though.
 
I siphon from fermenter (glass carboy for me) to keg. I dont purge with CO2 before, but I do purge the remaining headspace with CO2 once the transfer is complete. Basically the same as PassedPawn only difference is that my siphon line is long enough to reach the bottom of the keg so I dont need to hook it up to the liquid post
 
I siphon from fermenter (glass carboy for me) to keg. I dont purge with CO2 before, but I do purge the remaining headspace with CO2 once the transfer is complete. Basically the same as PassedPawn only difference is that my siphon line is long enough to reach the bottom of the keg so I dont need to hook it up to the liquid post

The nice thing about going into the beer post is that when it's full, I can pop it off the post and move it to the next keg without making a mess. I end up with > 5g of beer per carboy. Also, you don't have to worry about sanitizing the outside of the siphon hose.
 
The nice thing about going into the beer post is that when it's full, I can pop it off the post and move it to the next keg without making a mess. I end up with > 5g of beer per carboy. Also, you don't have to worry about sanitizing the outside of the siphon hose.

Fair enough. I usually end up with 5gal per carboy so it fits one keg perfectly. And I just toss the whole hose into sanitizer before adding to my racking cane so it all gets sanitized just fine. I do like the no mess of pulling it off the post. Different strokes I guess ;)
 
The nice thing about going into the beer post is that when it's full, I can pop it off the post and move it to the next keg without making a mess. I end up with > 5g of beer per carboy. Also, you don't have to worry about sanitizing the outside of the siphon hose.

If you dip the siphon hose into the bucket of sanitizer you are naturally treating both inside and outside at the same time so lack of having to sanitize the outside really doesn't seem like a benefit/advantage to me. But using the post when filling multiple kegs like you do would be a huge advantage.

To the OP, I'm like the others here which auto siphon to keg and do not purge prior to filling. As long as the siphon tube reaches to bottom of keg you won't have any oxygenation going on. It's been discussed in these forums a bunch. Definitely purge with 10psi a few times once filled and sealed up though!
 
I use option 2 but I do not purge the keg with CO2 first. I believe that's just hocus pocus with very minimal benefit if any.
 
If you dip the siphon hose into the bucket of sanitizer you are naturally treating both inside and outside at the same time so lack of having to sanitize the outside really doesn't seem like a benefit/advantage to me.

I don't use a bucket to sanitize (In fact, in all the years I've been brewing I don't think I've ever done that). I use spraybottles of starsan solution. Still, sanitizing the outside of the tubing wouldn't be a big deal, but just another step (for me) that I can avoid.
 
... I've done the closed-system with CO2 transfers, but it was a bit of a hassle for me since I'm fermenting in carboys. For those fermenting in kegs or conicals, probably the ideal method though.

When I was fermenting in carboys I found it actually very easy to rack under CO2 using one of those soft "rubber" red or orange carboy caps. The center outlet holds the (stainless) racking cane, the narrow, side one is for the CO2 tubing. Just a little CO2 pressure (~1 psi) is enough to get the siphon started and you can flow CO2 while racking, or disconnect and let it fill with air.

Since I moved up to fermentation buckets, that method isn't so easy anymore. I like the concept of air/O2 free transfers, especially for hoppy and other "fragile" beers, so it's been on my mind.

The only way I can see doing this with buckets is to drill another hole in the lids for a CO2 connection, so the headspace can be lightly pressurized. The airlock grommet hole also may needs some attention if the racking cane doesn't quite seal the opening enough.

With closed buckets there's also the visibility issue. Just leaving the last 2-3 quarts or so behind to prevent sucking up trub and yeast seems like a waste. I always tilt the bucket when the beer level gets low.
 
Most of the time its just a purged keg and auto siphon unless I have several to do. Then I go pressurized closed system and go in the beer out post so I don't have to worry about setting the tubing down and re-sanitizing. I can just drop the ball lock in some star san while I am moving things around.

Cheers
Jay
 
When I was fermenting in carboys I found it actually very easy to rack under CO2 using one of those soft "rubber" red or orange carboy caps. The center outlet holds the (stainless) racking cane, the narrow, side one is for the CO2 tubing. Just a little CO2 pressure (~1 psi) is enough to get the siphon started and you can flow CO2 while racking, or disconnect and let it fill with air.

Sounds very, very familiar :)

rack.jpg
 
I pump a small amount of Co2 into my kegs then siphon from my carboys with a 1/2 inch racking cane then I purge the head space a couple of times. I think this minimizes oxygen exposure while conserving Co2.
 
When I was fermenting in carboys I found it actually very easy to rack under CO2 using one of those soft "rubber" red or orange carboy caps. The center outlet holds the (stainless) racking cane, the narrow, side one is for the CO2 tubing. Just a little CO2 pressure (~1 psi) is enough to get the siphon started and you can flow CO2 while racking, or disconnect and let it fill with air.


I voted for this, though I haven't done it yet (I've only racked one batch to a keg so far. Did it the autosiphon method. Of course, it was a very pale white IPA, why wouldn't it be?). Still waiting for a packaged cap + wand thinger from NB to come back in stock. Regardless of my opinions on musings of how long it takes O2 to bind in beer when exposed / purging a keg to attempt to evacuate existing oxygen, I guess the main thing is...this seems really simple / easy and doesn't really cost you much CO2.
 
I pump a small amount of Co2 into my kegs then siphon from my carboys with a 1/2 inch racking cane then I purge the head space a couple of times. I think this minimizes oxygen exposure while conserving Co2.

That small amount of CO2 will mix immediately with the air inside through turbulence, and does close to nothing to minimize O2 exposure. The CO2 blanket is a myth.

There are some threads on purging vessels and the residual air/O2 volumes after each purge. It's surprising how much CO2 is needed to purge out an air volume. Pre-purging by pushing out a 100% Starsan-filled keg with CO2 is the cheapest and most efficient method to obtain a close to 100% O2-free receiving environment.

Actually, when a 5 gallon keg is filled 80% with beer (4 gallons) it takes as much CO2 to purge the 1 gallon remaining headspace to around 2% O2 as it takes to pre-purge the whole keg to ~0% O2.
 
I just spray everything down with star san and use a tube to connect the valve from my bucket to the bottom of the keg. Open up the value and call it a day. I haven't had an issue.
 
I ferment in buckets,usually, so I just autosiphon to the keg. Never bother to purge it first, just the head space a few times after.

Never had any trouble with it this way. Some kegs have been kept over a year like this.
 
That small amount of CO2 will mix immediately with the air inside through turbulence, and does close to nothing to minimize O2 exposure. The CO2 blanket is a myth.

There are some threads on purging vessels and the residual air/O2 volumes after each purge. It's surprising how much CO2 is needed to purge out an air volume. Pre-purging by pushing out a 100% Starsan-filled keg with CO2 is the cheapest and most efficient method to obtain a close to 100% O2-free receiving environment.

Actually, when a 5 gallon keg is filled 80% with beer (4 gallons) it takes as much CO2 to purge the 1 gallon remaining headspace to around 2% O2 as it takes to pre-purge the whole keg to ~0% O2.
That's crazy! And I'm surprised at all the people who don't purge their kegs at all first before siphoning in. I purge with 10 PSI, hook up a picnic tap to push out the sanitizer in there, open the top and autosiphon from bucket to keg. Then purge a few times with 30 PSI.
 
I just started a new process that I am pretty pumped about.

I am purging my kegs with CO2 by filling them with StarSan and then using CO2 to push it out into the next keg.

My fermenters are 60L Speidels. I put a spigot on the top with a CO2 line connected. I use that to push the beer out of the lower spigot and into the Out-side of the keg using a disconnect. The PRV is open while doing this to allow the CO2 to vent out of the keg as it is displaced with beer.

I keep the kegs on a scale so I know when they are full.

Just curious (and lazy)...what weight do you go to?
 
That's crazy! ...

Not sure what you're referring to that's crazy. Perhaps the amount of gas it takes to purge air from a gallon of headspace? Do the calculations.

Look at this post on residual O2 some breweries seem to require for stability. The rest of that thread is pretty interesting too.

open the top and autosiphon from bucket to keg. Then purge a few times with 30 PSI.

Opening the lid will mix air back into that keg, it may be a small enough amount to never notice it, but it's there and purging afterward will only dilute it. Instead, leaving the lid on and filling through the liquid out post is a way better method to keep O2 levels in the keg at an absolute minimum.
 
This is actually a dilemma I'm planning ahead for. I'm rebuilding my brewery after a move and my new fermenter is a Vittles Vault that will live in a small chest freezer fermentation chamber. I plan on fermenting 12+ gallons at a time, so it's going to be too heavy and awkward to get the fermenter up to a siphon-able height once it's in there.

My plan is to push with CO2. I'll start with a keg full of star-san and another for a "catch" keg. CO2 will push the star-san out of the first keg and into the 2nd (or just a bucket, who knows?) to sanitize and purge the keg. Then I'll switch the hookups and CO2 will push into the fermenter, which will push beer out into the keg (venting the CO2 out of the keg in the process). I could daisy-chain into a 2nd keg to push the CO2 from the 1st to the 2nd, or even push the first 5 gallons right through to the 2nd keg.

I can't see any other way of transferring from the fermenter without a hoist to lift it, unless I build a stand for the fermentation chamber so it's already off the ground (which I've also considered).
 
The nice thing about going into the beer post is that when it's full, I can pop it off the post and move it to the next keg without making a mess. I end up with > 5g of beer per carboy. Also, you don't have to worry about sanitizing the outside of the siphon hose.

passedpawn, how do you know when your first keg is full (the lid is closed and you can't see) and when to switch your beer disconnect to a next keg?

I know this old post but still wondering.

I am in the process of putting together my closed transfer process from conical fermenter into multiple (2-3) kegs.
 
passedpawn, how do you know when your first keg is full (the lid is closed and you can't see) and when to switch your beer disconnect to a next keg?

I know this old post but still wondering.

I am in the process of putting together my closed transfer process from conical fermenter into multiple (2-3) kegs.

When it gets close, I remove the keg lid and look. Not really O2-less, but good enough for me.
 
I keep it SFS. I treat the keg like a bottling bucket/big beer bottle.

Put some star san in and shake it all around then drain it out through all ports. Just enough co2 to keep the keg sealed and keg is marked C&S.

On bottling day I open the keg and add the priming sugar water to the keg. Siphon the beer in and seal it up and give it a shot of co2 to seal the lid.

Its like any other part of this hobby. Its your beer and you do what works into your schedule and budget.
 
I have only tasted one beer that was oxidized. That was from me endlessly messing with the co-2 trying to seal a leak. I personally don't see enough benefit to using Co-2 to a purged keg or for transfer
Maybe I drink them too fast. Your mileage may vary.:)
 
I want to eventually setup a spundling valve...

Sorry, I know this is old, but an internet search brought me here to learn, then I had to go Google what "spundling" meant. (Hint: word only exists in Urban Dictionary. Not Safe For Polite Company.)

For future readers, that's a "spunding valve" (no L).

:D
 
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