LethalCorpse
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- Joined
- 19/2/07
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I'm seriously considering diving into keg fermentation, so I'm looking at floating dip tubes. I want to put these in my serving kegs too. I have a concern with how to use them without losing a lot of beer though.
All the ones I've seen suspend the end of the tube on a hook, an inch or two below the beer level. Great for extracting clear beer from the first pour, all the way down the keg. But what about at the bottom? The way I see it, the end of the tube is going to dive into the trüb long before the keg is empty. This will transfer all that yeast and debris you've been avoiding since the top of the keg. Or, if you stop transferring as soon as it hits the cake, you leave those couple of inches of beer above the tube.
This is much less of a problem for dispensing than fermenting, as there's a lot less trüb. It just means the last few pints are full of gunk instead of the first. But for a fermenting keg, this looks like a real problem.
The simple answer, of course, is "don't be greedy, RDWHAHB". But if you're fermenting in a keg you've already reduced your batch size quite a bit to allow head space. I don't want to end up with the serving kegs half full.
Has anyone encountered this, and have you come up with a solution? Are there floating dip tubes that hold the end closer to the beer level, or a way to get it to sit on top of the yeast cake when it gets to the bottom?
All the ones I've seen suspend the end of the tube on a hook, an inch or two below the beer level. Great for extracting clear beer from the first pour, all the way down the keg. But what about at the bottom? The way I see it, the end of the tube is going to dive into the trüb long before the keg is empty. This will transfer all that yeast and debris you've been avoiding since the top of the keg. Or, if you stop transferring as soon as it hits the cake, you leave those couple of inches of beer above the tube.
This is much less of a problem for dispensing than fermenting, as there's a lot less trüb. It just means the last few pints are full of gunk instead of the first. But for a fermenting keg, this looks like a real problem.
The simple answer, of course, is "don't be greedy, RDWHAHB". But if you're fermenting in a keg you've already reduced your batch size quite a bit to allow head space. I don't want to end up with the serving kegs half full.
Has anyone encountered this, and have you come up with a solution? Are there floating dip tubes that hold the end closer to the beer level, or a way to get it to sit on top of the yeast cake when it gets to the bottom?