Yep, I've ordered a few of those, but it's going to take a few weeks for them to arrive, and in the meantime, I'm thirsty. I'm going to head to the local homebrew shop to see if he's going a bazooka screen and maybe I can attach it to the end of the dip tube somehow.peteru said:The cylindrical filters that I linked to and use have a fairly large surface area, so they do a good job. The only thing to watch out for is that you must not put the dip tube all the way to the end, otherwise it will press against the bottom of the filter and restrict the flow.
i haven't clogged one yet but I've got a sour aged on cherries and raspberries in kegs to come out.Nattydstar said:I tried using pantyhose on the end of the dip tube but it clogged again right away, I am sure the end of the dip tube just isn't enough surface area to act as a filter without getting blocked. I toyed with the idea of something spherical with holes all over it at the bottom of the dip tube but I think it's probably going to be easier to just clean and sanitise a fermenter, rack it into that with a hop sock on the end, then rack it back into the keg, hopefully free of these pesky particles.
New question is - am I going to run into trouble trying to rack carbonated beer into a fermenter and back into a keg?
OT I'll be doing the same with a 9% Belgian and some oak, I want to bulk age for 6-12 months how long for the oak do you think?barls said:i haven't clogged one yet but I've got a sour aged on cherries and raspberries in kegs to come out.
Indeed! I'm already three pints in and planning my next brew day (a red rye IPA). Cheers mate.MickGC said:Good result mate, now drink it fast before any infection get a chance
and its not often people dont wanna drink beer fast!
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