1 psi = 6.8948 KPaI have a harris too. I understand your drama. You do know how to convert it
Any tips on kegging a brew and storing it for a later date, i only have a small fridge in my shed which can only hold one keg, i have only started kegging recently, so would like to know if storing is possible
Sure is possible. You have a few options if storing
- Natural Carbonation, just like in bottle you prime keg with "sugar" (dextrose usually) and let it go through secondary fermentation during storage. When you are ready to drink it (atleast 2 weeks later to allow for the secondary ferment) then it will be carbonated and ready to get cold.
- Forced carbonation - you can do this either prior to or after storage, you will have to chill the keg to make life easier for force carbonation. If you plan on carbonating afterwards you should "burp" the keg with CO2 before storing to get rid of any left over oxygen in the keg which will oxidise your beer and make it go off.
My recommendation is that if you are planning on storing multiple kegs, so you can basically rotate them is to rack to the keg from your fermenter, prime and store. That way it will carbonate itself in the mean time and will be ready to rock and roll when you need it (given you can wait a couple/few weeks).
Allowing your beer to "age" for atleast a month or so will in general (very big generalisation here) make it taste better anyway.
Hope this helps.
Pok
Whats your tips on fixing Flat beer from keg?
Australians use the metric system S.I units. I don't get people who use imperial like lb's, PSI inches etc to bloody confusing! specific gravity of water is 1 (about close enough) 1 litter of water weighs 1 kg. Barometric pressure of atmosphere is 1 bar (close enough) is that not easier i say?Why does everyone talk in kpa pressure instead of PSI or Bar.....am I the only forum member with a Harris
CO2 regulator which registers in PSI or Bar ?
Anyone?Will this method work using the same pressure and same rocking times if I am force carbonating a 9L mini corny keg?
Thanks for the inpur - I took your advoce. I just gave it a wack and shook for 22 seconds... pressure ended up dropping too low so did it again for 10 seconds... pressure ended up resting at about 20 psi so I figure I'll leave it there and slow carb it the rest of the way... I've got 6 days before I need it ready for drinking. Note that I could only get the pressure up to 42 psi.I would say the same method would work but instead of shaking it for 50 seconds do it for 25 secs since its half the amount otherwise you will over carb it.
Hi all,
Is there any correlation between the final gravity of a beer and and the absorbsion of co2 into said beer?
I've just kegged a Mikkeller Beer Geek Breakfast clone which had an fg of 1.026 due to all the oats in the mash.
Force carbed it as I normally do, which is the Ross method and then rocking for a further 5 to 10 minutes at serving pressure just in case it fell short. I poured my first beer, and it's flat. Almost no fizz.
Is it just the case of I need to crank it up for longer whilst rocking the keg?
Cheers
Hook up as you would for Ross method. Crank the reg up to 350psi for 15 seconds. No rocking required. Leave for 15 mins, release pressure. Set to serving pressure and enjoy. It will take a few more days to be perfect but you will be drinking carbed beer before you know it.
:beer:
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