So ... I put my first brew into the new keg yesterday. I had expected to be doing it a week ago but it was still bubbling a bit in the FV so I left it for a while longer. Then I did a quick taste of the sample I took out to blend the priming sugar brew and it acually tasted a bit sour so I decided on the spot that I'd prefer not to keg that and bottle it instead. ( This brew is a frankenstein mix of a Morgans Amber plus LME; the last time I did it it actually turned out a bit sharp too - not in a 'bad' way just not quite what you'd want for a winter warmer) . And I happened to have another FV just coming ready of a Morgans Old toucan and decided to keg that instead.
I am using the BrewKegTap keg + regulator + Pluto beer gun kit with a SodaStream cylinder and adaptor.
I had made a checklist of all the steps to follow based on the previous discussion so got on with it. Poured a gallon of ChemSan into the keg, put on lid, pressurised to 12psi, drew it out with the Pluto beer gun, no visible leaks.
Took half a pint of the brew, added priming sugar as per Morgans instructions (23 * 8 g/l = 184g) and heated to dissolve, put that in keg then gently siphoned the brew on top, Left a small amount of head space (I'm not sure how much is "right"). Lid on, pressurised to 20psi to get the lid to seal.
Now the car crash begins to unfold. I have been planning to do keg conditioning not force carbing. Morgan says to condition at 22 - 30 deg C for 5 days. I took my brew-belt that had been round the FV, wrapped it round the keg, set the InkBird controller to 22.5 degrees, tucked things away as tidily as was practical, and a bit later went to bed.
Iwoke up an hour before the alarm with a horrible realisation.
I had not transferred the InkBird temperature probe! The probe was stil on the side of the plastic FV.
Worried that I'd have an overheated keg, I came down to the utility room in me dressing gown. Beer on the floor. Thought 'Oh dear', unplugged the InkBird, went to get dressed.
Looking at it now things are much worse than just an overheated keg.
Evidently the gas in pipe from the SodaStream cylinder to the keg had been touching the brew belt. The brew belt was turned on by the InkBird and never turned off again. The belt got hot enough to melt the gas pipe and the CO2 cylinder was empty.
I had a second horrible realisation - I had forgotten to fit the check valve in the gas pipe and it looks like beer has got into the regulator.
I heard glugging sounds coming from the gas post and I snipped the melted section out of the gas tube, fed it into a blowoff bottle and am seeing bubbles.
I am also a bit puzzled as it looks as if there was leakage around the beer-out post but I don't know for sure.
So - a bit stuffed. I guess I get a new SS cylinder, put the brew under CO2 again and see if it has survived :-(
I also realise I don't understand how keg posts work .
I had thought that if there's no pipe in the JG fitting it would be shut but no, it seems that it's pemanently open - is that right? Is the ssame true for the beer out? Surely not
Until I get a new CO2 cylinder I guess my keg is basically open?
I am using the BrewKegTap keg + regulator + Pluto beer gun kit with a SodaStream cylinder and adaptor.
I had made a checklist of all the steps to follow based on the previous discussion so got on with it. Poured a gallon of ChemSan into the keg, put on lid, pressurised to 12psi, drew it out with the Pluto beer gun, no visible leaks.
Took half a pint of the brew, added priming sugar as per Morgans instructions (23 * 8 g/l = 184g) and heated to dissolve, put that in keg then gently siphoned the brew on top, Left a small amount of head space (I'm not sure how much is "right"). Lid on, pressurised to 20psi to get the lid to seal.
Now the car crash begins to unfold. I have been planning to do keg conditioning not force carbing. Morgan says to condition at 22 - 30 deg C for 5 days. I took my brew-belt that had been round the FV, wrapped it round the keg, set the InkBird controller to 22.5 degrees, tucked things away as tidily as was practical, and a bit later went to bed.
Iwoke up an hour before the alarm with a horrible realisation.
I had not transferred the InkBird temperature probe! The probe was stil on the side of the plastic FV.
Worried that I'd have an overheated keg, I came down to the utility room in me dressing gown. Beer on the floor. Thought 'Oh dear', unplugged the InkBird, went to get dressed.
Looking at it now things are much worse than just an overheated keg.
Evidently the gas in pipe from the SodaStream cylinder to the keg had been touching the brew belt. The brew belt was turned on by the InkBird and never turned off again. The belt got hot enough to melt the gas pipe and the CO2 cylinder was empty.
I had a second horrible realisation - I had forgotten to fit the check valve in the gas pipe and it looks like beer has got into the regulator.
I heard glugging sounds coming from the gas post and I snipped the melted section out of the gas tube, fed it into a blowoff bottle and am seeing bubbles.
I am also a bit puzzled as it looks as if there was leakage around the beer-out post but I don't know for sure.
So - a bit stuffed. I guess I get a new SS cylinder, put the brew under CO2 again and see if it has survived :-(
I also realise I don't understand how keg posts work .
I had thought that if there's no pipe in the JG fitting it would be shut but no, it seems that it's pemanently open - is that right? Is the ssame true for the beer out? Surely not
Until I get a new CO2 cylinder I guess my keg is basically open?