I've made two kegs for a friend's wedding, but it's several states over.
I relatively new to the kegging thing, I was hoping someone could point out any flaws in my current plan:
I have one co2 tank but not the double pressure gage, so I plan on getting a manifold splitter. I realize this is not ideal but I don't have the money for a new gage.
I will force carb both the kegs starting tomorrow and let them sit for three weeks. (Yes, I'd of liked to have more time but this is how it goes.)
I'll unhook the co2 tank from the kegs, carefully pack everything up and drive it to the wedding.
Chill the beer when I get there, re-hook up the co2 to both kegs with the manifold, and serve.
...
Will I lose any pressure by unhooking the co2? I've never done that before. Also, is it going to be a problem if I chill to force-carb, let the beer warm up on the drive, and then re-chill? Should I just force carb at room-temp?
Thanks!
I relatively new to the kegging thing, I was hoping someone could point out any flaws in my current plan:
I have one co2 tank but not the double pressure gage, so I plan on getting a manifold splitter. I realize this is not ideal but I don't have the money for a new gage.
I will force carb both the kegs starting tomorrow and let them sit for three weeks. (Yes, I'd of liked to have more time but this is how it goes.)
I'll unhook the co2 tank from the kegs, carefully pack everything up and drive it to the wedding.
Chill the beer when I get there, re-hook up the co2 to both kegs with the manifold, and serve.
...
Will I lose any pressure by unhooking the co2? I've never done that before. Also, is it going to be a problem if I chill to force-carb, let the beer warm up on the drive, and then re-chill? Should I just force carb at room-temp?
Thanks!