• Welcome to National Homebrew Club Ireland. Please login or sign up.
July 18, 2025, 04:53:50 AM

News:

Want to Join up ? Simply follow the instructions here
Not a forum user? Now you can join the discussion on Discord


Corny keg brite tank

Started by Mossy, July 02, 2017, 01:20:31 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Mossy

Just wondering if it's possible to use a corny keg as a brite tank?
Has anyone here tried this? And if so what extra equipment would be needed to bottle straight from the keg without loosing any carb?
Cheers

DEMPSEY

Yes it can. You will need it bright enough going in and then carb it up and bottle with a good counterpressure bottler.
Dei miscendarum discipulus
Forgive us our Hangovers as we forgive those who hangover against us

LordEoin

Curious. Why do you want to?

Mossy

Quote from: LordEoin on July 02, 2017, 10:52:37 PM
Curious. Why do you want to?

I can never seem to get the carb levels just right with carb drop or bottling bucket. Just another avenue I'm investigating.

SprocketFuel

There's plenty of calculators out there to help you get carbing right
https://www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/

Mossy

Quote from: Stecleary84 on July 03, 2017, 06:27:59 PM
There's plenty of calculators out there to help you get carbing right
https://www.brewersfriend.com/beer-priming-calculator/

Thanks for the link. I've used calculators like his but the problem for some reason seems to be consistency.
If I use the bottling bucket method some bottles in the same batch are over carbed and some are under.
After I boil up the sugar and add the beer to it I would only give it a fairly light stir to avoid any oxidation.
Maybe I need to be a bit more vigorous with it, you know? Let it know who's boss!

DEMPSEY

Give it a good stir to make sure your getting all the sugar dissolved. Remember you are bottle conditioning so any oxygen you pick up will be scavenged by the yeast as it carbs it up.
Dei miscendarum discipulus
Forgive us our Hangovers as we forgive those who hangover against us

SprocketFuel

I alway put the boiled sugar into a bottling bucket and move the beer from my fermentor onto it, It makes sure the priming sugar is will mixed in evenly

johnrm

@Mossy, do you have Kegs? If so do you have CO2?

Purge your bottling bucket with CO2 to minimise oxidation when transferring.
I do this when bottling and when filling Kegs.
I have many other issues but Oxidation is not one.

When you are making up your sugar solution use enough water that your syrup has low viscosity, 80g in 100ml or so.
Simmer for 5 mins so its well dissolved and pour into bucket.
Give it some CO2 (if available)
Fill bottling bucket ensuring beer is going only in one direction (either clockwise or anti) This will mix the sugar evenly.
Then don't faff about, fill.

Mossy

Quote from: johnrm on July 04, 2017, 07:30:26 PM
@Mossy, do you have Kegs? If so do you have CO2?

Purge your bottling bucket with CO2 to minimise oxidation when transferring.
I do this when bottling and when filling Kegs.
I have many other issues but Oxidation is not one.

When you are making up your sugar solution use enough water that your syrup has low viscosity, 80g in 100ml or so.
Simmer for 5 mins so its well dissolved and pour into bucket.
Give it some CO2 (if available)
Fill bottling bucket ensuring beer is going only in one direction (either clockwise or anti) This will mix the sugar evenly.
Then don't faff about, fill.

Cool, thanks. I'll give these and the previous suggestions a go.
I have a few corny kegs and some co2 that I never use out in the shed.
No one has said yeah a corny keg brite tank is a good idea.
It seems like a good idea in theory, am I missing something?

johnrm

I don't think anyone said it was bad.

'Corny as a bright tank' is what I would call 'Kegging and beer gun filling'.
It speeds up Ferment to Dispense but you still have to have a means to fill bottles (or mini kegs)

Its worth figuring out your bottle conditioning by following the tips above - This method has been used by nearly all homebrewers and with great success.

LordEoin

i think people just don't bother because if you have a keg of beer ready to drink it's easier to just stick a tap on it than to go to the bother of bottling it from the keg.

Dr Horrible

I bottle all my beers from a keg just like you've described here but the reason I do it is because all my brewing and beer storage is in a shed away from the house and I don't have a kegerator so keg carbonation is less influenced by temperature than bottle carbonation ( in that you can adjust carbonation pressures to compensate for hot or cold weather). Also with a beer gun to purge bottles with CO2 you really minimise oxidation. I could bottle condition this time of year without much trouble but to be honest I've gotten very fond of the beer gun since I figured it out.

Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk


Mossy

Quote from: Dr Horrible on July 05, 2017, 05:38:37 PM
I bottle all my beers from a keg just like you've described here but the reason I do it is because all my brewing and beer storage is in a shed away from the house and I don't have a kegerator so keg carbonation is less influenced by temperature than bottle carbonation ( in that you can adjust carbonation pressures to compensate for hot or cold weather). Also with a beer gun to purge bottles with CO2 you really minimise oxidation. I could bottle condition this time of year without much trouble but to be honest I've gotten very fond of the beer gun since I figured it out.

Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk

I'd be in kind of the same situation as yourself space wise.
What beer gun do you use?

Dr Horrible

Blichmann - got it off one of the lads here when it was advertised last year.