Yes, I've done this in a few different ways but ultimately I dont think it's worth it, and a 10l corny with a spunding valve and a party tap does a much more satisfactory job in my experience. These are the ways I've done it, if you're interested:
- Brewed a 5l batch of all grain beer on the stovetop, chilled in the sink and fermented and served from the pinter. It was a Sierra Nevada type beer, and there was no dry hop.
- Brewed a 20l batch of stout, fermented it in a bucket, bottled c15l and put c5l into the pinter with a little sugar for conditioning only (so didnt need the docking station). This worked well, but was running out of gas by the end.
- Brewed a 23l batch of all grain beer in the all in one, then took a "no chill" approach and pumped it out into 4 x 5l plastic "jerry cans" whilst still at ~90c. With the heat expansion each container takes a Iittle more than 5l (which suits the pinter) then I fermented and served 2 of these using the pinter. Worked fine, but I've not come up with a good approach for dry hopping. The remaining two containers I ended up fermenting under pressure in a 12l corny, and I was able to dry hop more easily and also serve at good pressure right to the end.
The Pinter 3 tap is a big improvement over the others, so if you were looking to pick one up, i'd look for one with the P3 tap (they fit both pinter 2 and pinter 3).
If you wanted to borrow one, more than happy to let you use mine.
Cheers!