My brewfridge is too small to take a keg, unfortunately. The keg will be in our house's integrated garage. It's a good shady place that never receives direct sunlight but ambient temperature is what it is and so I may go back to bottling for the summer brew. What temperature does it reach in summer in your outhouse?I manage most of the year without any active chilling as my kegs sit in a well shaded out house that abuts onto the back of the kitchen, But come summer i need a shelf chiller to pipe the beer through as otherwise its foam city..
And i need to adjust the serving pressure and vent before most sessions to accommodate changes in the weather, and mid winter EVERYTHING IS FIZZY, and by the end of spring its tricky to contain highly conditioned brews..
A brewfridge if you have the room is a godsend, unfortunately they have yet to make one 34cm wide
90% of what I brew will be ale and I favour a carbonation volume of 1.9 - 2.0 vols which is at the low end of the pressure scale. In winter though I'll do a lager at 2.3 vols. I don't particularly enjoy the sharper mouthfeel of a gassy beer and much prefer the softer feel of a cask ale.So depending on the style of beer your after pouring you may want to look into investing in a short length of microbore..
That was a great post by the way and gives me a lot to think about.