as a newbie scared to brew my 1st batch, I loved your careful, calm presentation. so many others stop the filming and jump ahead skipping a critical aspect for someone as green as myself!
great video ..you have the most calming voice...i hope if i am in an airplane and the wings fall off you are next to me telling me it is going to be ok ....
Hey, thanks for the great information! I just came into possession of a keg, and kegerator, and this will be really helpful when I start kegging my own beer.
Matt Bosworth Great stuff Matt. Feel free to ask whatever you like. Please ask kegging questions on this video, so that perhaps others with similar questions can get the answers also :)
Great video David, perfectly instructive. I have exactly the same regulator and gas bottle as you. I am trying to get my first keg set up but I am having real problems getting the regulator connected to the keg. I have an 8mm reinforced gas line which connects to the regulator via a barbed connector, but I can't get the other end attached to the grey disconnect- it is too big for the barb. All the barbs available to buy seem to be the same size. Can I ask how you did this? Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it Stuart. There are 2 ways to try. First one would be to heat up the end of the gas line in boiling water and then try to get it to fit. You need it to be tight of course! If this doesnt work then buy some extra line at the right size to fit, secure it with a metal clip and use a reducer so that you can connect the two pipe sizes. John guest fittings are very good. Plumbing supply stores will have them as will relevant webstores.
Going to purchase this setup soon and this video helps immensely. The main thing I want to to with kegging my homebrew is bottle straight from keg (with a beer gun). I would like to know if my bottles will still age/condition from keg like they do from pitching DME primer?
Great. Conditioning in bulk is actually better that splitting into smaller volumes. As long as your beer is carbonated in the keg then it will work just fine in bottles.
Thank you for the informative video David. After the keg is carbonated to the required level, then what happens with the co2 - is it left switched on or it it removed, until the next time you fancy a few pints? Will the beer go flat within the keg without a constant gas supply? Am just mindful that if I have say 35 to 40 pints in the corny (which could take several weeks to consume), how to maintain a carbed contents? Can it be left and carbed again later? Thank you in advance
Sorry Peter, I thought I had replied to this but it seems the answer didnt go through! Glad you found the video useful. You should leave the gas left on as it will have a part to play in keeping the carbonate as you empty the keg gradually. You can remove it before you start drinking it though.
Peter Gaffney Great questions. I am on second round with kegs and first wasn’t very successful with carbonation! What have you learned regarding your questions?
David Heath Homebrew even though the serving gas is less psi, does this not allow the beer to release its co2 then becoming flat? I feel like this happened to me. Nothing on line really addresses that as to whether or not it’s an issue.
Hi chikenlegs5, I learned that the outside temperature [of the keg] made a difference to the carbonation process so obviously, the cooler the better. After a few mixed results, I tried not to rush the process thereafter, leaving the keg and gas connected, then taking small samples to test every day or so, until I felt I’d reached the desired level. An important thing I learned personally was to record and write down my results, throughout that testing period, noting the PSI level, the day number, my findings. This helped me gauge roughly the overall time I allowed. What didn’t help me at all was trying to speed up the process. You’ll have seen videos of folks rolling their kegs, shaking them etc. However when I’d tried this and attempted to kickstart the process quicker, my results were just too varied each time. Patience was my virtue. Keg up the beer, store in a cool area out of sunlight. Connect the gas, set to desired level. Then revisit it at regular intervals. Notepad at the ready, small sample out (quarter of a pint say), record result. Return next day or two, then repeat. When the desired level was reached, then turn the PSI right down but leave connected [on]. Yes I over carbed on occasion. More head than beer, consistency of champagne! Trying to tinker with the thickness of my beer lines to compensate, but that wasn’t the answer really. I worked away midweek at the time so it was harder for me to ‘keep an eye on it’ so to speak and test regularly.
Peter Gaffney thanks for the thorough response! I tried to rush too. This time I’ll use priming sugar and only hook up tank to serve. Especially since all stores are closed to refill my tank!
This is really a great starting video! Thx! I have a question about priming sugars. If you keg, do you in general, not use priming sugar and only use the gas to carbonate? Except if the beer style required it, is brewing sugars no longer necessary?
Thank you :) You can actually use sugar in kegs if you wish but most people simply use c02 because it is easier and can be faster. You will need c02 anyway for serving pressure. Hope this helps:)
I enjoy your videos. Many thanks. I have terrible problems getting my carbonation right. I will follow this now and hopefully will get it better. In particular I noticed you using different line sizes. Well I don’t. Can you tell me the two sizes you use. Many thanks. Michael, New Zealand
Great to hear, thank you. I use a mix of 3/16” and 1/4”. The best way forward is to use a calc like this one and your troubles will be over:- www.kegerators.com/beer-line-calculator/
Hi David, First of all thank you for your time bringing these tutorials to us and they are of great value to newcomers especially, Could you please help with a issue I have, After watching many you tube videos I set up my keg as follows, Keg (Regulator) set at 16 psi to carbonate in the fridge for two weeks and then poured at that psi (16) through 32 inches of 3/16 line with a small amount of (1 Inch) 3/8 each end to accept connectors (John Guest). I use the Kegland pluto gun for the dispensing. When my beer is poured dependent on what beer I have no issue with getting a head on the beer but carbonation seems to be very light and after a couple of minutes the beer seems to go flat. Can you please give any advice as what my problem may be. Thank you again for any help. P.S If it makes any difference I am running the gas into the kegs through 3/16 line as this is the easiest way of getting a line into my fridge without drilling any holes. Thank you
Great video, thank you. If you use the same size 19L keg in the video do you have to fill with a volume up to the point in which you described or could you half fill and bottle the rest?
Thanks Alaster. You can use the volume as you wish. Plenty more keg related videos on my channel that could interest you. I recently covered kegerator set up also.
Thanks for great video! About to get my equipment for kegging now. Can put the keg away and store the beer after carbonation like i do with my bottles? and how long can it sit like that? Do i lower the pressure on my regulator when im gonna serve the beer?
Thank you. Storage of beer like this is all about the style. Beers with wheat and other adjuncts will go off quicker. Beers that rely on hop flavour also die off flavour wise after some months. Its not really the keg that is the limitation. Some beers, like high gravity need to sit for long periods before they hit prime condition also!
Hi nice n informative video. Generally how many days you need to put beer under kegging for carbonation to achieve? Cant I use it once I force carbonate like soda company/Coke or Pepsi. They just carbonate flat drink on the fly and serve it. Is it something possible with beer?
Usually I carbonate over 1 week. There are fast carbonation techniques out there that involve rolling the keg and adding lots of pressure. I use the slower method for more control.
Thanks Michael. Personally I do not but some do. In the end it is all about choices. Sugar can be cheaper than gas. There is no wrong way here. Which ever way you go you will need gas to maintain serving pressure.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Interesting! Can you also naturally carbonate without any lines connected in this way or do you need the regulator to release pressure in case the carbonation level gets too high? And if so: are you in fact filling up your CO2 tank if you do it like this?
Can you carbonate a keg by putting the pressure to it, unhook it so the pressure stays in the keg and then carbonate another keg? Just wondering if you need two co2 tanks or if you can pressurize one keg and then unhook it. Thanks guys!
Hi David, thanks for all of the videos you do. You mentioned to keep the level of beer below the gas tube. Can you please explain why? My last brew I over filled because I could not see the level do to sanitation foam. Everything seemed to taste and work fine for me.
Hi David, excellent video, thank you!! I’m after some advice if possible. I’ve just kegged my first ipa. I intend to keg condition this for a few weeks before carbonating it with CO2 2-3 days before I refrigerate it and serve. Is this the correct way, or would you advise I carbonate it for a few days now, then let it sit for a few weeks and then refrigerate? Many thanks for any advice you can give and keep up the good work! Ed
Thanks Ed. IPA and hoppy styles in general are really a question of taste in terms of conditioning. Many people enjoy them best fresh. For this reason they go straight to keg and carbonate in a fridge. If you carbonate at warmer temps then this will have a much reduced effect also. If you do decide to condition then I would suggest you purge the keg with co2 after transfer. This will protect the beer against oxidisation. Hope this helps :)
Hi. I have quick and i guess stupid question, even two. I am new to brewing, so thank you for your patience. Do I need my keg be hooked to the gass bottle for dispensing the beer or the initial pressure will sufice to empty the keg? Second: will the carbon regulator work with argon. I do use argon and dual (CO2/Argon) regulator when making wine. So, I wonder it that will work. Thanks.
I would suggest trying this free app for smartphones. It allows you to enter key information and advises you on the mix and pressure which makes the whole thing much easier:- mcdantim.com/tools/calculator
Hi David, thanks for the video. I'm making a Wheat Beer - Bavarian Dunkelweizen (3.6-4.48). I went to the linked site and plugged in 5c for a CO2 volume of 4 (between the two figures). The calculator came out at 2.01 bar, which comes to 29psi! Does this look correct? It's much higher than the usual 10-12 psi. How long should should 29 psi be set for, and does the serving pressure remain at 29 psi? Regards ZT
Great video. I'm about to keg my first batch and want to do it right. It's an IPA -- which it sounds like I need to carbonate in a fridge. Correct? Once it's carbonated, can I take it out of the fridge and store it for a week and then drink it later? If that is possible, do I need to keep the CO2 connected the entire time or do I disconnect everything and just store the keg?
Thank you. Yes, its much better to carbonate cold. Best to keep it cold also. Depending on temperature and the amount of pressure you put it under will determine the fridge time and carbonation time. After this then yes you can take it out of fridge but you will need pressure when serving it.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew If I want to store my newly carbonated keg, do I need to keep the CO2 connected or do I disconnect everything and store it in my fridge? Do I need to use the release valve to let out the excess CO2 before I store it?
Fantastic David! Your channel is a great source for learning for us newcomers just starting out! One question. Do you recommend the Corny lid floating kit? Please keep up the good work and great videos! Thank you sir.
Hi David, thanks for your videos! I'm new to kegging and have kegged a couple beers now. However, this time around after force carbonating my beer for a few days the beer is very foamy. I've just reduced the carbonation pressure to serving pressure, but all i get is foam. Do you normally need to wait after reducing the pressure in the keg prior to serving?
hello and very nice video! can i ask you if i need to have the co2 connect during carbonitation time or just set the psi one time and then in the fridge thank you
Many thanks. Yes, you will need to keep it connected so that you have enough pressure to serve to beer which requires more pressure as you go. This is one of my early videos you will find many more on my channel covering all sorts of topics :)
Great vid i was wondering whats the best way to carbonate a corny keg if u havnt got a fridge to put it in but it will get connected up to my chiller once its carbonated many thanks
David can I put the keg and the co2 tube together in the refrigerator at 4 °c for a week?? Or it's not recommended to put the co2 at that temperature... from Argentina love your Channel
Thank you David, very useful. I have a new Kegerator with three Kegs that will hold three different types of beer, what happens if each need different amounts of carbonation?
Hey David ! I do have a question. Do we have to carbonate the beer at a specific temperature ? (Depends on the style i guess ?) And after at what temperature do you store the beer for serving ? For example can i start kegging ale even if i do not have a fridge ? (The room is at constant temperature : around 20°c)
Sorry for the late reply, YT has some errors with message reporting recently so I only just got to see this! Having a low temperature is important otherwise you will need to use much higher levels of pressure.
Can you fill a corny key half full and still force carbonate? I am the only one in my house that drinks and I might not get through 5 gallons before it goes bad. I have looked at the mini kegs. You can get a 4 liter keg very reasonably. However the spear that fits it and has the fittings for CO2 and the tap cost more than 3x as the keg! I just have to measure my fringe and see if a corny keg will fit.
Hi David, I have beer chiller and problem with massive foam. I use corny keg and the beer line between keg and chiller is 3m long 10mm OD. First, I carbonating beer on 4°C 24h on 3 bars. After that I take corny out of fridge and it stay on room temperature (24°C). Serving pressure is 2 bars. Now, beer chill again from 24 to 3°C in chiller but foam is more then half glass. Any sugestion ?
Hi Velimir, Temperature is key here. Can you not leave the keg in the fridge? Also there is a relationship between line size and length vs co2 pressure. It is best to use a beer line calculator like this :-www.kegerators.com/beer-line-calculator/ Sadly it is hard to find a good one in metric.
Hi David, thanks for another awesome video! I noticed you squirt your Star San into a plastic container...do you re-use it? How many times can the same solution be re-used, over what sort of time period, before it might be getting a bit funky? ...and can cleaning solution be re-used across days or even a couple of weeks apart I.e. for two brew days a fortnight apart?
What I tend to do is leave PBW in my fermenter between brews after giving it a visible clean. Then I transfer this to a container on brew day and use it to clean the brewing system afterwards.
Can you keg a beer, add gas then disconnect and store for when it’s needed? Or must the beer stay connected to the gas? Sorry if this has been answered. I’ve got a keg I want to fill then put away for a few months time
You certainly can but it will need more gas and a low temperature if it is to be carbonated. But fir storage this is fine. Be sure to purge 3-4 times to remove oxygen.
Hi Dave, new subscriber here. I am very interested in upgrading from plastic home brew pressure barrels to cornelius kegs, but I have a couple of questions regarding the CO2 bottles required to run them! I have contacted BOC and they have told me I will have to set up an account with them and pay a monthly rental on the bottle just like a pub! Can't you just buy the CO2 bottle and just pay to get it refilled? And the other questions is, if you have say half a dozen different beers, do you just add your required CO2 to the keg at the beginning of the storage, or does each keg require to be connected up to the CO2 all the time in order to stay in good condition?
Welcome :) Usually most home brewstores will refill co2 for you. Alternatively get a sodastream adapter for your regulator and use those smaller bottles. Very popular in some areas. I use a combination of both.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Hi Dave, since your reply the other day regarding CO2, I have done some research myself, and come across some information you may be interested in? I was given the details of a company called T and J installation, there phone number is 01980 733008. They do 6kg pub size bottles of CO2 for £22.97 Inc vat! And even though the bottles remain the property of the company, there is NO monthly charge for them! But it gets better, the woman I spoke to in customer service told me, so long as I wanted to wait two weeks for them to be in my area, they also offer a free delivery and collection service! Hope this information is of some interest to you or anyone else in the future! Many thanks, Neil.
Hi David, fairly new to your videos and totally new to home brewing. I think the standard of your videos are outstanding, in presentation, content and quality. Regarding the GrainFather. in order to brew larger quantities do you think the connect control box could be used in larger equipment? The fact that GrainFather has recipes would it not be fairly simple to adapt on larger equipment and simply scale up?
Thanks Ian thats great to hear. I see no reason why the connect controller could not be used with larger equipment. When scaling recipes keep in mind that it is not just straight math. Here is a guide to resizing recipes:- ua-cam.com/video/EiGUQgW2xmI/v-deo.html
David thanks for such a quick reply. I am about to involve myself in a new commercial brewing/retailing adventure. Is it possible for me to send you a private message in any way?
Hi David, Thank for all your helpful videos. I was hoping you could help me regarding carbonation. I repeatedly have the problem that I am not getting enough (for my taste) carbonation in my Cornelius kegs. I have tried everything from the recommended setting on Brewersfriend to setting the pressure at 30 psi for the first 3 days then reducing to 10-12psi for a week. I have not had a fridge during these tests, but I have had them lying down here in my shed in Denmark during the winter, so the temp has been between 2-7 C - my assumption was that this would be just as efficient as a fridge. Any thoughts? Thanks in advance from Copenhagen.
Thanks Chris. Temperature is really a vital thing in the carbonation process and will limit what is achievable sadly. 2-7 C should work just fine though. Have you checked for leaks/ seen much gas loss?
No I’m pretty certain there is no leak - the pressure stays constant and a lot of foam is created. I have just installed a fridge in the shed, maybe that will do the trick.
I find the UA-cam interface really confusing but I’m hoping you have a video on how to install an ink bird or similar thermostat to control the temperature of the new fridge.
Hi David, First thank you for a nice video! Just bought my first keg kit. I heard that it is recommended to prime the keg with CO2, how do you do that? Or is it not needed?
Hi Christian, glad you found it useful. If you plan on keeping the beer for extended periods say over 6 months then it could help but its debatable. Ive certainly never done it. Purging the top as shown should be enough :)
Thank David for the video, i am sure someone in this comment list has asked, but can you reuse your sanitized liquid, it looks like you are putting it back into a bottle?
Great Video David. I'm just curious, what is the purpose of having the two different beer line widths connected together? What are the drawbacks of just having say, 8ft of 3/16's for example?
Thanks David. Quite an old video now! This is about line size for fittings. The 3/16 line will not fit sadly but is best for a better pour. Check out my newer keg content :)
Hello David! I am setting up new kegerator and trying to determine beer line length. I find contradicting things online. Any calculator you trust or recommend? I have 20 feet of 3/16 line for just two kegs so I should have plenty to play with.
Great. Personally I would split that in half and see on the results. It would be very close to what I am running in my first Kegerator. I have recently put a new one together and produced set up guides here:- ua-cam.com/play/PLeY07JqsrXM9aUnX1zWZ-Z11t-O71Yc1w.html
Hey David! I know this video is older, but how do you recommend storing empty kegs? Should they be under pressure, or is cleaned and sealed good enough in your experience? Thank you!
Very old video by I do have a question for you... When carbonating, once the CO2 is in the keg, do you have to keep the CO2 bottle connected to the keg or do you simple force the required amount of CO2 and then disconnect the gas bottle ?
Great video. However, PBW, here in the states anyway is a non caustic cleaner. I think you refer to it as a "caustic soda based cleaner." You can use caustic, however must be extremely careful as it is highly corrosive. I'd say caustic works better, but not a typical home brewer type cleaner, and can only be used on certain types of materials. Typically you find it in professional breweries. Maybe I am wrong, don't want to sound like I know to much when I really don't. Cheers!
Hi David. Have you ever used any of the smaller homebrew beer kegs please? I've seen some which are sized at 2, 5 or 10 litre capacity and the 10 litre would appeal to me more. I'd be very interested to know if you or any of your beer making friends have tried any of these. Many thanks Sean
Hi Sean, I know that people do and are happy with them. Personally I see the prices and stick with 19L. If I brew smaller batches they can still go into a 19L keg.
The calculator asks what the temperature of the keg is, is this asking what I plan to store it at or what it is currently at when I am transferring beer into it? Should I just be using the temperature that I have my beer fermenting at (or currently at) right before I put it into the keg? If I am supposed to be using the temperature the keg is currently at and it is defaulting to 36, should I be chilling my keg before filling with homebrew?
Thanks so much what would be the smallest co2 bottle you would use? I am not a big drinker but seems a 5kg bottle is normal? I'm liking these sodastream bottles but don't know how many kegs they would run.
I use a mix of larger co2 sizes, including SodaStream. No problem in running 4 kegs off one sodastream bottle, it just will not last as long as a larger bottle of course :)
David, there's something else I think you should make people aware of. When turning on the co2 pressure and adjusting the regulator, you need to start with the main regulator turned all the way to the left then slowly turn it to the right to increase the pressure. It's the absolute opposite of what people would expect. I only learned this when I was purchasing parts for my co2 tank. Had I not talked to the staff I would've definitely blasted everything when turning on the main pressure.
Good evening sir. I will be kegging my first beer, an irish stout soon. Do I just put it at 5 psi and let it sit for a week or so? I have seen other videos where they did like 20 psi for a few days, then dialed it back to 5 and let it sit. Just trying not to screw up my first batch. Any help is appreciated.
Hi :) Best and easy way here is to use a calculator like this one:- www.brewersfriend.com/keg-carbonation-calculator/ It is best to carbonate over a week or so before the beer is at the right level rather than rushing it :)
Hi David. If i carbonate in my keezer and when the beer is balanced, I take it out and let it come to room temperature for storage, and then put it back in the keezer a few days prior to tapping, will the CO2 volume still be the same in the beer? Or shall i leave them in the keezer the whole time?
+Henrik Schou I used to do a similar thing myself years back, as long as you dont leave more than a month or twos gap then all will be fine, perhaps more but I never tested that, so cannot speak out of experience.
Yes, that will make all the difference. I recently put out 2 new videos showing a full kegerator set up that showed the lines in detail that could prove helpful. It's one line size that does well without any real fuss.
When the one week is up, do you disconnect the gas, or do you keep it connected? And if you keep it connected what pressure do you dispense the beer at?
Sure, here is an example from Amazon. As long as you find one that is food safe then it will work. www.amazon.com/Learn-To-Brew-B000E60JF6-Auto-Siphon/dp/B000E60JF6
Thanks so much for all the great guidance, David. Just got my 4-tap kegerator and various bits and pieces from Kegland, which it turns out is just down the road from me. Frustrated now because the taps and gas bottles were out of stock, but I have the gas bottles on order from a second-line supplier. Going to spend the weekend organising the garage and setting up the kegerator, sans taps. And, sadly, probably bottling my latest batch. Burch's Law doth have its sting. BTW, I've been brewing exclusively with the Verdant yeast, trying to really master the IPA styles that I prefer. Thanks also for recommending that, because it has made a major difference to my throughput.
Newish to brewing...recently exchanged my c02 tank and pressure checked one of my kegs and when I opened the lid it was full of "smoke" is this normal? Cause for concern with the c02 tank?
Hi David im all set up for my first home brew but my beer tap is making the beer come out very fast the glass is nearly full of foam i was wondering how can I slow it down too poor a great beer please
Great to hear Peter. There are various ways. Firstly make sure the pressure on your regulator is set at a suitable level. Also look at beer line length online, there are calculators for this. I have a video coming that looks at tuning for flow control very soon also.
Hi David I have problems with foaming when serving the beer from the keg. I noticed your beer line I have seen sinilar ones online but they all come with the plastic party taps yours has a rather nice tap may I ask where you purchased it? Also if the beer line is clear won't the beer that remains in it spoil? Thanks John
I think this document is something to look at, its an essay topic otherwise :) www.craftbrewersconference.com/wp-content/uploads/NewGuidelines-BlendedGasforDraughtBeer1.pdf
Great video David, thanks! Are you in the UK? If so, where could I get a co2 tank like yours? The one I have is too heavy to move around. Cheers, Jose.
Where in the UK are you Jose? I have been looking and found three or four suppliers within my areas of the Midlands, through Staffs and up into Lancashire. I decided against using BOC in the end as I was not comfortable with their monthly direct debit contract
What about Bristol Gas Supplies Ltd, Victoria Road, St Philips, Bristol, BS2 0UT? I notice they supply co2 cellar gas with free local delivery? www.bristol-gas.co.uk
Hello. I am wondering what kind of tubing do you use for transferring beer ? Silicone? Or maybe polyurethane food quality? This speed fittings are for calibrated hose such as for air system and I think silicone hose is not proper for this fitting but maybe I am wrong. Can you also explain what diameter and length of hoses is best for serving/transferring a beer from keg?
Personally Ive switched over to EVA barrier tubing. Its dual wall, easy to work with and very protective. I like the 4mm ID 8mm OD type. It works great as beer & gas lines.
I have used this some years back. I am more switched onto bottling directly from a conical fermenter these days and using sugar for a natural method. I have stouts over a year old still without oxidisation in using this method.
Any advice on gas options? This is first time doing this setup and a bit confused with the 60/40 and 70/30 stuff on co2 canisters. As they seem to be about 50 quid it's not cheap if I mess it up. Thanks for the detailed video.
Hello. I've seen on youtube video a method how to get rid of oxygen from a keg before we fill it up with beer. The method is to fiil up the keg full of water with star san and then pump out the solution using co2 and liquid line. I am wondering how much star san solution will remain at the bottom of the keg and how this will affect the beer?
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Ok. I didn’t know that star san solution can be yeast food also. That sounds good. Since now I don’t have to worry about star san anymore !!!
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks for clearing it up. I've bought a kit with a keg & pluto gun, which just has a single 3/16 line. It connects to the gun and keg side with Duotight connectors. My first keg, planning on filling it this weekend.
Hi David. Do you have any experience with dispensers like Pygmy 25? I often experience a lot of foaming when I tap a beer. Normally the beers in the kegs are at room temperature, the dispenser is set to around 5 deg C, co2 vol in the beer around 2.4, with a co2 pressure at around 3 bar for serving. The beerline I use is a 1.3 m 5/16". Any ideas on how to lessen the foaming?
Henrik Schou Room temperature is your problem there! You could increase you line length with some 3/8" that would help. There are also anti foam products out there. My stout keg is stored in my basement at 14 deg c and was a challenge to reduce foam in.
Thanks for the answer. If I understand you correct, I add 1 m 3/8" at the keg connector and then reduce to the 5/16" 1.3 m line up to the dispenser? I have a keezer at home, which works like a treat. The dispenser is only used when we're out.
Hi, yes generally you are going to need a reducer. Though there is a new type of picnic tap that allows just a reducer that you can then fit a foam reducing line to.
I would do it if you feel the beer will not be drunk within 3-4 months or if there are ingrediants that are easily effected by oxidisation like oats, wheat and rye for example.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew I have never actually done it, but watching the video reminded me of it. The reason I started kegging was because of oxidation in my first NEIPA and that brew is lucky to last 3 weeks.
Sir what is volumes I mean in unit of co2 here? Actually I am talking about unit in forced carbonating calculator... For ex. Taken 2 ? 2 kg or M3 or what?
That is something that you dial in using your regulator. So when you do this you have control of the pressure. You really cannot use CO2 without one safely.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew @David Heath Homebrew Sir, I think either my question is not clear, or I could not able to understand your reply. Sir, I am just asking what is 2 (say for example) in forced carbonating cal. Say, if I want to forced carbonate 10L Belgium styl beer at 4 deg Celsius, then what I have to fill in the carbonating calculator in "volumes of Co2" ,. If 2 or 3 or whatever, what is the unit of this.
There are tools online to help with this. For example, Belgian Ales are going to at between 1.9 - 2.4 CO2 volumes. You can use a calculator to add in the data and see where you need the pressure to be. A good free one, I will link to you. Below the calculator is a guide to beer styles and the typical CO2 range. Hope this helps :) www.brewersfriend.com/keg-carbonation-calculator/
This will depend on temperature. My kegs are usually held at between 3-5C and the right carbonation takes around 7 days on average. Then it is a case of having a serving pressure. I am usually going with a similar PSI for serving so generally leave it where it is.
Thanks for the info... HI Does anyone know if I can force carbonate my 20L 30L or 50L Kegs, With Soda Stream Type Gas Bottles... I have lots of soda stream gas bottle thanks
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks for that, I wasn't sure if it had the pressure required to force carbonate the beer keg, I was going to cool the keg down in the fridge and leave the Soda Stream 425g bottle attached for about 24 hours at about 15 - 20 Psi
Depends on the level of carbonation you are looking for. I usually go between 10-15 PSI personally. Some will use much more and then decrease it to carbonate a beer faster.
ilan magen The results are harder to predict and change. Also keep in mind that most beer benefits from time to settle and condition before being drunk. Whats the hurry? Brew more and hurry less :)
Hi Simon, I live in Norway. I have released other videos recently that are to do with kegerators and kegs. I have a new one coming soon about cleaning kegs, lines and taps. Plus one planned in a month or so where I will be setting up a new kegerator.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew thanks for the reply.the video was very good. i was looking for video on how to clean a guinness keg, and i ran to your video which was lovely. i am planing to keg my own local drink(beer). and the problem is how much co2 i will need and how long do i need it to settle before is ready to serve?
It is a long time since I did this but I used 75% N2. I found it was best to half fill a glass, wait a few seconds and then finish the pour for the best results. Things may have changed though, faucets are much better designed these days. Hope this helps.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew I'm a beginner just learning how to load sparkling water for sale on the street...please give me some input on how I can sell sparkling water by making my own in a short time..I just ordered a 20liter kegs and a co2 tube..temperature in town me if the day is 30°c and the night is around 20°c how many liters of water should I put in the kegs and how much pressure to make sparkling water quickly so I can sell it as soon as possible
I've been using a King Keg with a Brugas S30 gas cylinder. It works very well with real ales, producing a pretty flat pint. I can't get my cylinder recharged so am looking at the Cornelious Keg but am concerned that the pint will be too gaseous. I intend to use a CO2 injection . Do you have any advice or comments?
Hi Michael. I believe that you will find the corny keg to be a huge upgrade with a very controllable amount of carbonation at your finger tips. Here is a playlist of videos that will help you with this:- ua-cam.com/play/PLeY07JqsrXM95WZePptGyckuC57_5N6Q9.html
as a newbie scared to brew my 1st batch, I loved your careful, calm presentation. so many others stop the filming and jump ahead skipping a critical aspect for someone as green as myself!
Great to hear Kevin. Check out my newer content on this topic too 🍻🍻
Been brewing for a couple years now, but always something new to learn. I 2nd your sentiment.
I needed a good, clear, and easy video on how to keg my beer with Co2 and I have just found it! Thanks a lot! Cheers!
Cheers Jimmy. This is a very old video :) Check out my newer content too :)
great video ..you have the most calming voice...i hope if i am in an airplane and the wings fall off you are next to me telling me it is going to be ok ....
Haha :-) Glad you liked it :)
David to the rescue again - thanks this has been your standard masterclass. great work !
Thank you, much appreciated 🍻🍻😎
Your videos have been quite helpful. Cheers from Portland, OR, USA, mate!🍻
Thanks James, great to hear. This is very much an older video 🍻🍻
Hey, thanks for the great information! I just came into possession of a keg, and kegerator, and this will be really helpful when I start kegging my own beer.
Great, I have various other guides for kegs and kegerators too :)
Excellent, I shall be using this guide in the coming weeks and probably asking lots of questions!! Cheers David.
Matt Bosworth Great stuff Matt. Feel free to ask whatever you like. Please ask kegging questions on this video, so that perhaps others with similar questions can get the answers also :)
A most helpful video - thank you for posting. I'm hoping to purchase my first kegs soon and this helped a lot to know the way around the unit.
+Andy C They sure are nice to have :)
Thank you for this video, helped me a lot to get started with my kegging.
You are so welcome! Sorry for the late reply, YT has some errors with message reporting recently so I only just got to see this!
Great video David, perfectly instructive. I have exactly the same regulator and gas bottle as you. I am trying to get my first keg set up but I am having real problems getting the regulator connected to the keg. I have an 8mm reinforced gas line which connects to the regulator via a barbed connector, but I can't get the other end attached to the grey disconnect- it is too big for the barb. All the barbs available to buy seem to be the same size. Can I ask how you did this? Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it Stuart. There are 2 ways to try. First one would be to heat up the end of the gas line in boiling water and then try to get it to fit. You need it to be tight of course! If this doesnt work then buy some extra line at the right size to fit, secure it with a metal clip and use a reducer so that you can connect the two pipe sizes. John guest fittings are very good. Plumbing supply stores will have them as will relevant webstores.
Going to purchase this setup soon and this video helps immensely. The main thing I want to to with kegging my homebrew is bottle straight from keg (with a beer gun). I would like to know if my bottles will still age/condition from keg like they do from pitching DME primer?
Great. Conditioning in bulk is actually better that splitting into smaller volumes. As long as your beer is carbonated in the keg then it will work just fine in bottles.
Thank you for the informative video David. After the keg is carbonated to the required level, then what happens with the co2 - is it left switched on or it it removed, until the next time you fancy a few pints? Will the beer go flat within the keg without a constant gas supply? Am just mindful that if I have say 35 to 40 pints in the corny (which could take several weeks to consume), how to maintain a carbed contents? Can it be left and carbed again later? Thank you in advance
Sorry Peter, I thought I had replied to this but it seems the answer didnt go through! Glad you found the video useful. You should leave the gas left on as it will have a part to play in keeping the carbonate as you empty the keg gradually. You can remove it before you start drinking it though.
Peter Gaffney Great questions. I am on second round with kegs and first wasn’t very successful with carbonation! What have you learned regarding your questions?
David Heath Homebrew even though the serving gas is less psi, does this not allow the beer to release its co2 then becoming flat? I feel like this happened to me. Nothing on line really addresses that as to whether or not it’s an issue.
Hi chikenlegs5, I learned that the outside temperature [of the keg] made a difference to the carbonation process so obviously, the cooler the better. After a few mixed results, I tried not to rush the process thereafter, leaving the keg and gas connected, then taking small samples to test every day or so, until I felt I’d reached the desired level. An important thing I learned personally was to record and write down my results, throughout that testing period, noting the PSI level, the day number, my findings. This helped me gauge roughly the overall time I allowed. What didn’t help me at all was trying to speed up the process. You’ll have seen videos of folks rolling their kegs, shaking them etc. However when I’d tried this and attempted to kickstart the process quicker, my results were just too varied each time. Patience was my virtue. Keg up the beer, store in a cool area out of sunlight. Connect the gas, set to desired level. Then revisit it at regular intervals. Notepad at the ready, small sample out (quarter of a pint say), record result. Return next day or two, then repeat. When the desired level was reached, then turn the PSI right down but leave connected [on]. Yes I over carbed on occasion. More head than beer, consistency of champagne! Trying to tinker with the thickness of my beer lines to compensate, but that wasn’t the answer really. I worked away midweek at the time so it was harder for me to ‘keep an eye on it’ so to speak and test regularly.
Peter Gaffney thanks for the thorough response! I tried to rush too. This time I’ll use priming sugar and only hook up tank to serve. Especially since all stores are closed to refill my tank!
This is really a great starting video! Thx! I have a question about priming sugars. If you keg, do you in general, not use priming sugar and only use the gas to carbonate? Except if the beer style required it, is brewing sugars no longer necessary?
Thank you :) You can actually use sugar in kegs if you wish but most people simply use c02 because it is easier and can be faster. You will need c02 anyway for serving pressure. Hope this helps:)
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thx! I am going to build a "keezer" in December. So doing all my research now.
I enjoy your videos. Many thanks. I have terrible problems getting my carbonation right. I will follow this now and hopefully will get it better. In particular I noticed you using different line sizes. Well I don’t. Can you tell me the two sizes you use. Many thanks. Michael, New Zealand
Great to hear, thank you. I use a mix of 3/16” and 1/4”. The best way forward is to use a calc like this one and your troubles will be over:- www.kegerators.com/beer-line-calculator/
Hi David, First of all thank you for your time bringing these tutorials to us and they are of great value to newcomers especially, Could you please help with a issue I have, After watching many you tube videos I set up my keg as follows, Keg (Regulator) set at 16 psi to carbonate in the fridge for two weeks and then poured at that psi (16) through 32 inches of 3/16 line with a small amount of (1 Inch) 3/8 each end to accept connectors (John Guest). I use the Kegland pluto gun for the dispensing. When my beer is poured dependent on what beer I have no issue with getting a head on the beer but carbonation seems to be very light and after a couple of minutes the beer seems to go flat. Can you please give any advice as what my problem may be. Thank you again for any help. P.S If it makes any difference I am running the gas into the kegs through 3/16 line as this is the easiest way of getting a line into my fridge without drilling any holes. Thank you
Thanks Stephen :) What temperature do you have in the fridge?
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Hi David and happy new year, Thank you for your reply, My fridge is set at 4C - 39 F approx.
Great :) Happy New Year :)
Cheers David! This was a helpful guide!
Beer By The Numbers Im very glad that you found it useful.
Great video, thank you. If you use the same size 19L keg in the video do you have to fill with a volume up to the point in which you described or could you half fill and bottle the rest?
Thanks Alaster. You can use the volume as you wish. Plenty more keg related videos on my channel that could interest you. I recently covered kegerator set up also.
Thanks for great video! About to get my equipment for kegging now.
Can put the keg away and store the beer after carbonation like i do with my bottles? and how long can it sit like that?
Do i lower the pressure on my regulator when im gonna serve the beer?
Thank you. Storage of beer like this is all about the style. Beers with wheat and other adjuncts will go off quicker. Beers that rely on hop flavour also die off flavour wise after some months. Its not really the keg that is the limitation. Some beers, like high gravity need to sit for long periods before they hit prime condition also!
Hi nice n informative video. Generally how many days you need to put beer under kegging for carbonation to achieve? Cant I use it once I force carbonate like soda company/Coke or Pepsi. They just carbonate flat drink on the fly and serve it. Is it something possible with beer?
Usually I carbonate over 1 week. There are fast carbonation techniques out there that involve rolling the keg and adding lots of pressure. I use the slower method for more control.
Great vid David. Just one question, do you use priming sugar as wells the gas to carbonate in a keg ? Thanks Mike
Thanks Michael. Personally I do not but some do. In the end it is all about choices. Sugar can be cheaper than gas. There is no wrong way here. Which ever way you go you will need gas to maintain serving pressure.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Interesting! Can you also naturally carbonate without any lines connected in this way or do you need the regulator to release pressure in case the carbonation level gets too high? And if so: are you in fact filling up your CO2 tank if you do it like this?
You sure can. You will need lines for dispensing though.
Can you carbonate a keg by putting the pressure to it, unhook it so the pressure stays in the keg and then carbonate another keg?
Just wondering if you need two co2 tanks or if you can pressurize one keg and then unhook it.
Thanks guys!
No answer.. damn, would love to know it too...
Must have missed this! Yes you can do this as long as it remains sealed :)
Hi David, thanks for all of the videos you do. You mentioned to keep the level of beer below the gas tube. Can you please explain why? My last brew I over filled because I could not see the level do to sanitation foam. Everything seemed to taste and work fine for me.
The problem can be getting beer in your gas line. Small chance but the first pour fixes it. It is simply common advice to fill just under.
Do you still add brewing sugar like if you was to bottle it?
You can but using co2 instead is easier and there is no sediment. Plus you have full control.
Hi David, excellent video, thank you!!
I’m after some advice if possible. I’ve just kegged my first ipa. I intend to keg condition this for a few weeks before carbonating it with CO2 2-3 days before I refrigerate it and serve. Is this the correct way, or would you advise I carbonate it for a few days now, then let it sit for a few weeks and then refrigerate?
Many thanks for any advice you can give and keep up the good work!
Ed
Thanks Ed. IPA and hoppy styles in general are really a question of taste in terms of conditioning. Many people enjoy them best fresh. For this reason they go straight to keg and carbonate in a fridge. If you carbonate at warmer temps then this will have a much reduced effect also. If you do decide to condition then I would suggest you purge the keg with co2 after transfer. This will protect the beer against oxidisation. Hope this helps :)
Hi. I have quick and i guess stupid question, even two. I am new to brewing, so thank you for your patience. Do I need my keg be hooked to the gass bottle for dispensing the beer or the initial pressure will sufice to empty the keg? Second: will the carbon regulator work with argon. I do use argon and dual (CO2/Argon) regulator when making wine. So, I wonder it that will work. Thanks.
Hi :) No problem. Yes the co2 needs to be hooked up. Yes, no problem using argon. It is just more expensive than co2 for most.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks. I know that`s ok to use argon. My question was would a CO2 regulator do the job when I am using argon. :)?
Yes, most will support it :)
Really helpful video, are the CO2 volumes the same if you are using CO2/N2 mix for a stout?
I would suggest trying this free app for smartphones. It allows you to enter key information and advises you on the mix and pressure which makes the whole thing much easier:- mcdantim.com/tools/calculator
Hi David, thanks for the video. I'm making a Wheat Beer - Bavarian Dunkelweizen (3.6-4.48). I went to the linked site and plugged in 5c for a CO2 volume of 4 (between the two figures). The calculator came out at 2.01 bar, which comes to 29psi! Does this look correct? It's much higher than the usual 10-12 psi.
How long should should 29 psi be set for, and does the serving pressure remain at 29 psi?
Regards
ZT
Hi, its rather a lot for sure. You would not hold this for more than a week or two. Personally I never go this high but its a question of taste.
Great video, can I ask you, when pouring beer from a corny keg in a home setup can you pour through a beer cooler?
Thank you. Yes you sure can. Its a popular way in some countries, especially for outdoor use.
Great video.
I'm about to keg my first batch and want to do it right. It's an IPA -- which it sounds like I need to carbonate in a fridge. Correct?
Once it's carbonated, can I take it out of the fridge and store it for a week and then drink it later? If that is possible, do I need to keep the CO2 connected the entire time or do I disconnect everything and just store the keg?
Thank you. Yes, its much better to carbonate cold. Best to keep it cold also. Depending on temperature and the amount of pressure you put it under will determine the fridge time and carbonation time. After this then yes you can take it out of fridge but you will need pressure when serving it.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew If I want to store my newly carbonated keg, do I need to keep the CO2 connected or do I disconnect everything and store it in my fridge? Do I need to use the release valve to let out the excess CO2 before I store it?
Fantastic David! Your channel is a great source for learning for us newcomers just starting out! One question. Do you recommend the Corny lid floating kit? Please keep up the good work and great videos! Thank you sir.
Thanks for your support:) Yes, I have floating dips in all of my kegs. I have an up to date guide to this coming this month.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks David. Subscribed!
Great, thank you :)
Hi David, thanks for your videos! I'm new to kegging and have kegged a couple beers now. However, this time around after force carbonating my beer for a few days the beer is very foamy. I've just reduced the carbonation pressure to serving pressure, but all i get is foam. Do you normally need to wait after reducing the pressure in the keg prior to serving?
Hi Mark, this is a pretty old video! Check out my new keg content. I always slow carbonate personally. I hate to rush beer 🍻
hello and very nice video! can i ask you if i need to have the co2 connect during carbonitation time or just set the psi one time and then in the fridge thank you
Many thanks. Yes, you will need to keep it connected so that you have enough pressure to serve to beer which requires more pressure as you go. This is one of my early videos you will find many more on my channel covering all sorts of topics :)
Great vid i was wondering whats the best way to carbonate a corny keg if u havnt got a fridge to put it in but it will get connected up to my chiller once its carbonated many thanks
If you have a cold room that can work, if not connect to your chiller 🍻🍻🍻
David can I put the keg and the co2 tube together in the refrigerator at 4 °c for a week?? Or it's not recommended to put the co2 at that temperature... from Argentina love your Channel
No problem at all. Its quite common in very hot countries to have kegs at 2.5 deg c for months for dispensing.
Thank you David, very useful. I have a new Kegerator with three Kegs that will hold three different types of beer, what happens if each need different amounts of carbonation?
Great. I actually covered the solution for this very recently:- ua-cam.com/video/qgUuJrM0gws/v-deo.html
Hey David !
I do have a question. Do we have to carbonate the beer at a specific temperature ? (Depends on the style i guess ?) And after at what temperature do you store the beer for serving ? For example can i start kegging ale even if i do not have a fridge ? (The room is at constant temperature : around 20°c)
Sorry for the late reply, YT has some errors with message reporting recently so I only just got to see this! Having a low temperature is important otherwise you will need to use much higher levels of pressure.
Can you fill a corny key half full and still force carbonate?
I am the only one in my house that drinks and I might not get through 5 gallons before it goes bad.
I have looked at the mini kegs.
You can get a 4 liter keg very reasonably.
However the spear that fits it and has the fittings for CO2 and the tap cost more than 3x as the keg!
I just have to measure my fringe and see if a corny keg will fit.
Yes, you can, no problem there. Perhaps smaller batch sizes would suit you? See this video:- ua-cam.com/video/4HufFBFhMDU/v-deo.html
Hi David,
I have beer chiller and problem with massive foam. I use corny keg and the beer line between keg and chiller is 3m long 10mm OD. First, I carbonating beer on 4°C 24h on 3 bars. After that I take corny out of fridge and it stay on room temperature (24°C). Serving pressure is 2 bars. Now, beer chill again from 24 to 3°C in chiller but foam is more then half glass. Any sugestion ?
Hi Velimir, Temperature is key here. Can you not leave the keg in the fridge? Also there is a relationship between line size and length vs co2 pressure. It is best to use a beer line calculator like this :-www.kegerators.com/beer-line-calculator/
Sadly it is hard to find a good one in metric.
Hi David, thanks for another awesome video!
I noticed you squirt your Star San into a plastic container...do you re-use it? How many times can the same solution be re-used, over what sort of time period, before it might be getting a bit funky?
...and can cleaning solution be re-used across days or even a couple of weeks apart I.e. for two brew days a fortnight apart?
Thanks Kent. Yes star san is reusable. Just make sure the ph is at 3 or below. Keep it sealed and it can be good for months.
Fantastic, thank you! What about cleaning product like PBW?
What I tend to do is leave PBW in my fermenter between brews after giving it a visible clean. Then I transfer this to a container on brew day and use it to clean the brewing system afterwards.
Do you use anything to clear your beer? And how long after full fermentation do you keg it? Many thanks.
Hi, I do not filter my beers. I keg my beers usually within half a week of fermentation being finished. You could wait a month or keg sooner too.
Thanks great advice 👍
🍻🍻🍻
Can you keg a beer, add gas then disconnect and store for when it’s needed? Or must the beer stay connected to the gas? Sorry if this has been answered. I’ve got a keg I want to fill then put away for a few months time
You certainly can but it will need more gas and a low temperature if it is to be carbonated. But fir storage this is fine. Be sure to purge 3-4 times to remove oxygen.
Hi Dave, new subscriber here.
I am very interested in upgrading from plastic home brew pressure barrels to cornelius kegs, but I have a couple of questions regarding the CO2 bottles required to run them! I have contacted BOC and they have told me I will have to set up an account with them and pay a monthly rental on the bottle just like a pub!
Can't you just buy the CO2 bottle and just pay to get it refilled?
And the other questions is, if you have say half a dozen different beers, do you just add your required CO2 to the keg at the beginning of the storage, or does each keg require to be connected up to the CO2 all the time in order to stay in good condition?
Welcome :) Usually most home brewstores will refill co2 for you. Alternatively get a sodastream adapter for your regulator and use those smaller bottles. Very popular in some areas. I use a combination of both.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew
Hi Dave, since your reply the other day regarding CO2, I have done some research myself, and come across some information you may be interested in?
I was given the details of a company called T and J installation, there phone number is
01980 733008.
They do 6kg pub size bottles of CO2 for £22.97 Inc vat!
And even though the bottles remain the property of the company, there is NO monthly charge for them!
But it gets better, the woman I spoke to in customer service told me, so long as I wanted to wait two weeks for them to be in my area, they also offer a free delivery and collection service!
Hope this information is of some interest to you or anyone else in the future!
Many thanks, Neil.
Thanks for the video. Could you please just explain how do I attach more then one keg on one CO2 tank. Do I need another regulator for every keg?
You can buy a regulator that allows multiple kegs or extend your regulator. Your LHBS can show you the options here :)
Hi David,
fairly new to your videos and totally new to home brewing. I think the standard of your videos are outstanding, in presentation, content and quality. Regarding the GrainFather. in order to brew larger quantities do you think the connect control box could be used in larger equipment? The fact that GrainFather has recipes would it not be fairly simple to adapt on larger equipment and simply scale up?
Thanks Ian thats great to hear. I see no reason why the connect controller could not be used with larger equipment. When scaling recipes keep in mind that it is not just straight math. Here is a guide to resizing recipes:- ua-cam.com/video/EiGUQgW2xmI/v-deo.html
David thanks for such a quick reply. I am about to involve myself in a new commercial brewing/retailing adventure. Is it possible for me to send you a private message in any way?
Hi Ian, yes sure. You can email me here:- davejheath@gmail.com
Hi David, Thank for all your helpful videos. I was hoping you could help me regarding carbonation. I repeatedly have the problem that I am not getting enough (for my taste) carbonation in my Cornelius kegs. I have tried everything from the recommended setting on Brewersfriend to setting the pressure at 30 psi for the first 3 days then reducing to 10-12psi for a week. I have not had a fridge during these tests, but I have had them lying down here in my shed in Denmark during the winter, so the temp has been between 2-7 C - my assumption was that this would be just as efficient as a fridge. Any thoughts? Thanks in advance from Copenhagen.
Thanks Chris. Temperature is really a vital thing in the carbonation process and will limit what is achievable sadly. 2-7 C should work just fine though. Have you checked for leaks/ seen much gas loss?
No I’m pretty certain there is no leak - the pressure stays constant and a lot of foam is created. I have just installed a fridge in the shed, maybe that will do the trick.
Great :)
I find the UA-cam interface really confusing but I’m hoping you have a video on how to install an ink bird or similar thermostat to control the temperature of the new fridge.
Sadly not but I think you will find this useful:- www.onemansbeer.com/keezer-build-diy-temperature-controller/
Hi David,
First thank you for a nice video!
Just bought my first keg kit. I heard that it is recommended to prime the keg with CO2, how do you do that? Or is it not needed?
Hi Christian, glad you found it useful. If you plan on keeping the beer for extended periods say over 6 months then it could help but its debatable. Ive certainly never done it. Purging the top as shown should be enough :)
Thank David for the video, i am sure someone in this comment list has asked, but can you reuse your sanitized liquid, it looks like you are putting it back into a bottle?
Yes you can. With Star san as long as the ph is 3 or below then all is good.
I always sanitize the gas line too, but it seems that not everyone does that. In your opinion is it necessary to do that? why/why not? Thx.
I never have personally. Its not something that will cause issues
Great Video David. I'm just curious, what is the purpose of having the two different beer line widths connected together? What are the drawbacks of just having say, 8ft of 3/16's for example?
Thanks David. Quite an old video now! This is about line size for fittings. The 3/16 line will not fit sadly but is best for a better pour. Check out my newer keg content :)
Hello David! I am setting up new kegerator and trying to determine beer line length. I find contradicting things online. Any calculator you trust or recommend? I have 20 feet of 3/16 line for just two kegs so I should have plenty to play with.
Great. Personally I would split that in half and see on the results. It would be very close to what I am running in my first Kegerator. I have recently put a new one together and produced set up guides here:- ua-cam.com/play/PLeY07JqsrXM9aUnX1zWZ-Z11t-O71Yc1w.html
Hey David! I know this video is older, but how do you recommend storing empty kegs? Should they be under pressure, or is cleaned and sealed good enough in your experience? Thank you!
No problem at all. Cleaned and sealed works for me.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew thanks much! I’m always happy to save some co2 😊
@greenzo5690 great, cheers 🍻🍻🍻
Very old video by I do have a question for you... When carbonating, once the CO2 is in the keg, do you have to keep the CO2 bottle connected to the keg or do you simple force the required amount of CO2 and then disconnect the gas bottle ?
Sure, no problem :)
Yes, you need to keep the co2 connection as when you serve the beer pressure is needed.
So how does the carbonation work. I am still bottling and use corn sugar in my bottling bucket prior to filling my bottles.
The gas pushes co2 into your beer which creates the fizz 🍻
Great video. However, PBW, here in the states anyway is a non caustic cleaner. I think you refer to it as a "caustic soda based cleaner." You can use caustic, however must be extremely careful as it is highly corrosive. I'd say caustic works better, but not a typical home brewer type cleaner, and can only be used on certain types of materials. Typically you find it in professional breweries. Maybe I am wrong, don't want to sound like I know to much when I really don't. Cheers!
Well spotted Dan! I have to be honest I dont use PBW much but its a well known cleaner so I mentioned it. I use caustic soda based cleaners.
Hi David. Have you ever used any of the smaller homebrew beer kegs please? I've seen some which are sized at 2, 5 or 10 litre capacity and the 10 litre would appeal to me more.
I'd be very interested to know if you or any of your beer making friends have tried any of these. Many thanks Sean
Hi Sean, I know that people do and are happy with them. Personally I see the prices and stick with 19L. If I brew smaller batches they can still go into a 19L keg.
.
The calculator asks what the temperature of the keg is, is this asking what I plan to store it at or what it is currently at when I am transferring beer into it? Should I just be using the temperature that I have my beer fermenting at (or currently at) right before I put it into the keg?
If I am supposed to be using the temperature the keg is currently at and it is defaulting to 36, should I be chilling my keg before filling with homebrew?
That would be the storage temp. So if you put the keg into a fridge at say 5C then 5C is that temperature. I hope this helps :)
@@DavidHeathHomebrew helped a ton thanks!
Great :)
Thanks so much what would be the smallest co2 bottle you would use? I am not a big drinker but seems a 5kg bottle is normal? I'm liking these sodastream bottles but don't know how many kegs they would run.
I use a mix of larger co2 sizes, including SodaStream. No problem in running 4 kegs off one sodastream bottle, it just will not last as long as a larger bottle of course :)
@@DavidHeathHomebrew oh wow so how many corny kegs would a sodastream can do?
@@TheAlbiCollier I have not pushed it further than 4. It lasted about 3-4 weeks.
David, there's something else I think you should make people aware of. When turning on the co2 pressure and adjusting the regulator, you need to start with the main regulator turned all the way to the left then slowly turn it to the right to increase the pressure. It's the absolute opposite of what people would expect. I only learned this when I was purchasing parts for my co2 tank. Had I not talked to the staff I would've definitely blasted everything when turning on the main pressure.
Thanks for your input Scott 🍻🍻🍻
Good evening sir. I will be kegging my first beer, an irish stout soon. Do I just put it at 5 psi and let it sit for a week or so? I have seen other videos where they did like 20 psi for a few days, then dialed it back to 5 and let it sit. Just trying not to screw up my first batch. Any help is appreciated.
Hi :) Best and easy way here is to use a calculator like this one:- www.brewersfriend.com/keg-carbonation-calculator/
It is best to carbonate over a week or so before the beer is at the right level rather than rushing it :)
Hi David. If i carbonate in my keezer and when the beer is balanced, I take it out and let it come to room temperature for storage, and then put it back in the keezer a few days prior to tapping, will the CO2 volume still be the same in the beer? Or shall i leave them in the keezer the whole time?
+Henrik Schou I used to do a similar thing myself years back, as long as you dont leave more than a month or twos gap then all will be fine, perhaps more but I never tested that, so cannot speak out of experience.
Large to small lines! Perhaps that's why I get drinks that come out too foamy, I don't have that!
Yes, that will make all the difference. I recently put out 2 new videos showing a full kegerator set up that showed the lines in detail that could prove helpful. It's one line size that does well without any real fuss.
When the one week is up, do you disconnect the gas, or do you keep it connected? And if you keep it connected what pressure do you dispense the beer at?
Hi Hans, you need to keep it connected. I dispense at around 10-12 PSI personally.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks, I will try that next time I'm kegging.
Very good video btw, keep it up!
Cheers Hans 🍻🍻🍻
Hello, can you make a video of how to make that siphoning tube that u made and how it reduces the foam?
Hi, this is an auto syphon product. I did not make it, you can buy these in homebrew stores.
Can you leave a link here where to buy it from. Since I’m from India we don’t have alot of options.
Sure, here is an example from Amazon. As long as you find one that is food safe then it will work.
www.amazon.com/Learn-To-Brew-B000E60JF6-Auto-Siphon/dp/B000E60JF6
Thanks so much for all the great guidance, David. Just got my 4-tap kegerator and various bits and pieces from Kegland, which it turns out is just down the road from me. Frustrated now because the taps and gas bottles were out of stock, but I have the gas bottles on order from a second-line supplier. Going to spend the weekend organising the garage and setting up the kegerator, sans taps. And, sadly, probably bottling my latest batch. Burch's Law doth have its sting.
BTW, I've been brewing exclusively with the Verdant yeast, trying to really master the IPA styles that I prefer. Thanks also for recommending that, because it has made a major difference to my throughput.
Thanks Luke. Yes, demand is higher than ever for sure. Yes, Verdant is for sure fantastic stuff. Ive done a great deal of testing with it.
Newish to brewing...recently exchanged my c02 tank and pressure checked one of my kegs and when I opened the lid it was full of "smoke" is this normal? Cause for concern with the c02 tank?
Yes, this is to be expected. No concerns there.
Hi David, At 1:23 you talk about using reducers, do you have the wide or the thin tube from the keg first?
You will need wide first then reduced after then back to wide for the beerline. Otherwise it will not fit the keg or your beer tap.
David Heath thanks!
Hi David im all set up for my first home brew but my beer tap is making the beer come out very fast the glass is nearly full of foam i was wondering how can I slow it down too poor a great beer please
Great to hear Peter. There are various ways. Firstly make sure the pressure on your regulator is set at a suitable level. Also look at beer line length online, there are calculators for this. I have a video coming that looks at tuning for flow control very soon also.
I am looking at using a beer engine.
Have you set up one of these with the corny keg?
If so whats the chance of doing a setup video?
Cheers
Trevor
Trevor Harrington No I havent. None on youtube already?
Hi David I have problems with foaming when serving the beer from the keg. I noticed your beer line I have seen sinilar ones online but they all come with the plastic party taps yours has a rather nice tap may I ask where you purchased it? Also if the beer line is clear won't the beer that remains in it spoil? Thanks John
4Figgis I actually made the line myself and added a tap of my choice.
Thanks can you tell me where you got your particular tap from as I don't like the plastic party taps. Cheers
4Figgis I think I got this one on ebay.
What is the difference between CO2, 60/40 and 70/30 gas?
I think this document is something to look at, its an essay topic otherwise :) www.craftbrewersconference.com/wp-content/uploads/NewGuidelines-BlendedGasforDraughtBeer1.pdf
Another very useful video. Thank you :)
Many thanks Paul, much appreciated:)
Halo David how much sugar in need to introduce in a keg to riferment the normal quantity or less. Obviously depending of the style
Best way really is to use a batch priming calculator like this free one here:- www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/
I can't find the words to thenk you enough. You are the best
Thank you :)
Great video David, thanks! Are you in the UK? If so, where could I get a co2 tank like yours? The one I have is too heavy to move around. Cheers, Jose.
jlchajari Glad you liked it. I actually live in Norway but you will be able to find c02 tanks like this and smaller in the uk im sure.
Where in the UK are you Jose? I have been looking and found three or four suppliers within my areas of the Midlands, through Staffs and up into Lancashire. I decided against using BOC in the end as I was not comfortable with their monthly direct debit contract
Thanks David!
Hi Peter, I'm in Bristol. I've called BOC but I'm not sure about the rent fee. Do you have other company names that I can call? Many thanks!! :)
What about Bristol Gas Supplies Ltd, Victoria Road, St Philips, Bristol, BS2 0UT? I notice they supply co2 cellar gas with free local delivery? www.bristol-gas.co.uk
Hello. I am wondering what kind of tubing do you use for transferring beer ? Silicone? Or maybe polyurethane food quality? This speed fittings are for calibrated hose such as for air system and I think silicone hose is not proper for this fitting but maybe I am wrong. Can you also explain what diameter and length of hoses is best for serving/transferring a beer from keg?
Personally Ive switched over to EVA barrier tubing. Its dual wall, easy to work with and very protective. I like the 4mm ID 8mm OD type. It works great as beer & gas lines.
Thank you for reply. Do you think the length of hose does matter?
Yes, very much so. I use between 3-4 meters which gives good performance at many levels of carbonation.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thank you very much for reply. BTW I have just order evabarrier 👍🏻
Great, enjoy :)
Thanks for the video. If i have a 19L Cornelius keg to carbonate my beer, how many litter of beer can i fill i the keg when carbonating?
.
Have you ever primed sugar in a keg and than filling your glass beer bottles with a blichman beergun to avoid the risk of oxidation in stouts.
I have used this some years back. I am more switched onto bottling directly from a conical fermenter these days and using sugar for a natural method. I have stouts over a year old still without oxidisation in using this method.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew I must give that a try when i got the gf conical fermenter. Thank you.
Any advice on gas options? This is first time doing this setup and a bit confused with the 60/40 and 70/30 stuff on co2 canisters. As they seem to be about 50 quid it's not cheap if I mess it up. Thanks for the detailed video.
.
Hello, how many days for the carbonation in the PSI mentioned by brewersfriend?
I would allow an average of 7-14 days depending on carbonation level and temp difference.
Hello. I've seen on youtube video a method how to get rid of oxygen from a keg before we fill it up with beer. The method is to fiil up the keg full of water with star san and then pump out the solution using co2 and liquid line. I am wondering how much star san solution will remain at the bottom of the keg and how this will affect the beer?
Hi, this will leave a very small amount. It is tasteless and serves as yeast food. All good :)
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Ok. I didn’t know that star san solution can be yeast food also. That sounds good. Since now I don’t have to worry about star san anymore !!!
Star San is all good news :)
David, what’s the logic behind using beer lines of two different diameters? Wouldn’t a single thin line achieve the same thing?
It is because the larger line is needed to connect to the fittings at both ends. This is your ball lock on the keg side and shank on the serving end.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks for clearing it up. I've bought a kit with a keg & pluto gun, which just has a single 3/16 line. It connects to the gun and keg side with Duotight connectors. My first keg, planning on filling it this weekend.
George Hamilton Great. These did not exist when this video was made but they certainly make life easier now :)
Hi David. Do you have any experience with dispensers like Pygmy 25? I often experience a lot of foaming when I tap a beer. Normally the beers in the kegs are at room temperature, the dispenser is set to around 5 deg C, co2 vol in the beer around 2.4, with a co2 pressure at around 3 bar for serving. The beerline I use is a 1.3 m 5/16". Any ideas on how to lessen the foaming?
Henrik Schou Room temperature is your problem there! You could increase you line length with some 3/8" that would help. There are also anti foam products out there. My stout keg is stored in my basement at 14 deg c and was a challenge to reduce foam in.
Thanks for the answer. If I understand you correct, I add 1 m 3/8" at the keg connector and then reduce to the 5/16" 1.3 m line up to the dispenser? I have a keezer at home, which works like a treat. The dispenser is only used when we're out.
Henrik Schou Yes add the extra to your beer out line. It would be worth looking online at beer line calcs for a precise suggestion.
Do you find the 19l keg size awkward for the grainfather when you can make a 22l batch??
You can brew between 10-25L with the GF. Any size is easy. If you do not wish to bottle then go for 19L :)
Hello is an adapter required to attach the thin beer line to a picnic tap style dispenser?
Thanks
Hi, yes generally you are going to need a reducer. Though there is a new type of picnic tap that allows just a reducer that you can then fit a foam reducing line to.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew thank you
:)
Is there any point in flushing the empty keg with CO2 before transferring the beer?
I would do it if you feel the beer will not be drunk within 3-4 months or if there are ingrediants that are easily effected by oxidisation like oats, wheat and rye for example.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew I have never actually done it, but watching the video reminded me of it. The reason I started kegging was because of oxidation in my first NEIPA and that brew is lucky to last 3 weeks.
What size co2 bottle are you using and how long does it last?
Hi Wayne, I have 2 x 2kg bottles, they last over a year each in constant use. Ive got some smaller sodastream bottles also that I use with mini kegs.
What is that beer/keg gun called and where can I get one?? Good video!
These are called “Beer guns” Various manufacturers sell them at various pricesHere is a link:- www.morebeer.com/products/blichmann-beergun-v2.html
I had to figure out the line setup myself! I wish this video was out a year ago!
banjobrew It sure helps :)
my ball lock disconnects are hard to use, they got stocked!!! hard to attache them to the post, how can I oiling them?
You could try using food safe lubricant.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew thanks a lot,
Sir what is volumes I mean in unit of co2 here? Actually I am talking about unit in forced carbonating calculator... For ex. Taken 2 ? 2 kg or M3 or what?
That is something that you dial in using your regulator. So when you do this you have control of the pressure. You really cannot use CO2 without one safely.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew @David Heath Homebrew Sir, I think either my question is not clear, or I could not able to understand your reply.
Sir, I am just asking what is 2 (say for example) in forced carbonating cal. Say, if I want to forced carbonate 10L Belgium styl beer at 4 deg Celsius, then what I have to fill in the carbonating calculator in "volumes of Co2" ,. If 2 or 3 or whatever, what is the unit of this.
There are tools online to help with this. For example, Belgian Ales are going to at between 1.9 - 2.4 CO2 volumes. You can use a calculator to add in the data and see where you need the pressure to be. A good free one, I will link to you. Below the calculator is a guide to beer styles and the typical CO2 range. Hope this helps :) www.brewersfriend.com/keg-carbonation-calculator/
@@DavidHeathHomebrew dear sir, then in that case if 5.1 psi comes for 2 volumes of co2 , how long to do the carbonation. I mean the TIME.
This will depend on temperature. My kegs are usually held at between 3-5C and the right carbonation takes around 7 days on average. Then it is a case of having a serving pressure. I am usually going with a similar PSI for serving so generally leave it where it is.
Thanks for the info... HI Does anyone know if I can force carbonate my 20L 30L or 50L Kegs, With Soda Stream Type Gas Bottles... I have lots of soda stream gas bottle thanks
Sure you can. Just keep a watchful eye on your regulator to know when to replace.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks for that, I wasn't sure if it had the pressure required to force carbonate the beer keg, I was going to cool the keg down in the fridge and leave the Soda Stream 425g bottle attached for about 24 hours at about 15 - 20 Psi
That will work fine. I would suggest normal pressure until the keg is at cold temperatures to maximise the co2, its a waste otherwise as I see it.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Thanks for that. Will Do Thanks
Great :)
How much co2 once you start carbonating do you use
Depends on the level of carbonation you are looking for. I usually go between 10-15 PSI personally. Some will use much more and then decrease it to carbonate a beer faster.
brilliant video,so little for abeginner to learn how to step up from plastic barrels to kegs
Thank you, much appreciated. Much more on this channel since then also :)
Why you don't recommend express keg carbonation ?
ilan magen The results are harder to predict and change. Also keep in mind that most beer benefits from time to settle and condition before being drunk. Whats the hurry? Brew more and hurry less :)
have you ever tried carbonation with nitrogen? As I understand the equipment is different though?
Raino Erlich I have yes, its great for stouts!
would like to see the results :)
Absolutely fantastic. Thank you
Thanks Casey. This is quite an old video now, I have various much newer videos on kegerator topics that you should also find useful :)
@@DavidHeathHomebrew already subbed. Fantastic channel. Thanks!!
Cheers Casey :)
thanks for the video, are u based in uk? i will to see you demostrate it please
Hi Simon, I live in Norway. I have released other videos recently that are to do with kegerators and kegs. I have a new one coming soon about cleaning kegs, lines and taps. Plus one planned in a month or so where I will be setting up a new kegerator.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew thanks for the reply.the video was very good. i was looking for video on how to clean a guinness keg, and i ran to your video which was lovely. i am planing to keg my own local drink(beer). and the problem is how much co2 i will need and how long do i need it to settle before is ready to serve?
It is a long time since I did this but I used 75% N2. I found it was best to half fill a glass, wait a few seconds and then finish the pour for the best results. Things may have changed though, faucets are much better designed these days. Hope this helps.
Great videos👍exactly what I wanted to know👍
Thank you, glad you found it useful :)
what is the pressure to make good soda and what is the volume of co2?
I would suggest trying 4.5 co2 volumes, which means setting your regulator to 2.38 bar if you have the keg temperature at 5C.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew Can you make sparkling water in 10 minutes?
If you force carbonate or in line carbonate then yes.
@@DavidHeathHomebrew I'm a beginner just learning how to load sparkling water for sale on the street...please give me some input on how I can sell sparkling water by making my own in a short time..I just ordered a 20liter kegs and a co2 tube..temperature in town me if the day is 30°c and the night is around 20°c how many liters of water should I put in the kegs and how much pressure to make sparkling water quickly so I can sell it as soon as possible
You could try the fast carbonate method shown here:- learn.kegerator.com/force-carbonating-beer/
Hi David.
How long will co2 be immersed in keg before drink.
Usually a week to ten days.
I've been using a King Keg with a Brugas S30 gas cylinder. It works very well with real ales, producing a pretty flat pint. I can't get my cylinder recharged so am looking at the Cornelious Keg but am concerned that the pint will be too gaseous. I intend to use a CO2 injection . Do you have any advice or comments?
Hi Michael. I believe that you will find the corny keg to be a huge upgrade with a very controllable amount of carbonation at your finger tips. Here is a playlist of videos that will help you with this:-
ua-cam.com/play/PLeY07JqsrXM95WZePptGyckuC57_5N6Q9.html