I'm going to try something else.....
Rather than running pumps and water etc.....
I'll get 20mm copper tube to run from the font, back into the fridge, where it'll be bolted to a stainless steel block, to act as a heat sink.
The pipe will be lagged (outside the fridge), and the beer lines are fed through it.
No need to solder it or seal the ends, it'll just be the conduction of the cold into the pipe, which should cool the beer....
Heard it mentioned in passing on "basic brewing radio" , anyone else tried it??
If your tower/font is located remotely (as in not on top of the keezer/kegerator) then liquid cooling is going to be a must. Otherwise, air-cooling can be done with less fuss, especially if your tower/font us "n" shaped with two channels back to the storage compartment.
Internally glycol chilled with internal insulation isn't difficult on a home-scale and can be done relatively economically using a mini fridge/freezer with infrequent or even on-demand circulation. There should be plenty of examples here in this forum and on a simple google search. Loads of ideas/implementations out there on the cheap. The use of RV plumbing winterizing glycol should also prevent any bacterial issues inside the lines - the reservoir inside the freezer section would always be cold. The outside of the font should never get cold nor show condensation in this type of setup. Cooling is applied only to the internal beer lines and optionally also to the rear of the shanks inside the font.
0 degrees is way too cold to store kegs for any style of beer, so if the glycol lines are warmer than the beer, that's a user-created setup problem, not something that can happen by accident or unintentionally over time.
Moog, how did yoy go with your font mate ?
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