A single regulator is capable of supplying multiple kegs with gas at the same pressure. This can be achieved by the use of a T piece or a gas manifold.
An alternative is to move your gas from keg to keg as required. This way you can have differing carbonation levels in different kegs - just make sure you mark each keg & wind back the regulator after gassing higher pressure kegs.
Each keg should have it's max pressure stamped on it.
I hope that answers your queries
but can anyone help me by letting me know what pressure softdrink needs to kept at?
GL keeps soda water on tap and carbonates and serves at about 300kPa from memory, I am guessing that premix soft drink would be similar do some googling on "home soda fountains" and you may find some stuff as there are people in the US who even have postmix systems at home. I do know that you will probably double your rate of CO usage as well.Hi there,
With my beer keg setup I am thinking of putting in 3 pre-mix kegs. I know I will need to have 2 regulators due to the pressure, but can anyone help me by letting me know what pressure softdrink needs to kept at?
I generally have a soda water on tap all of the time, no great science behind it really, whack the gas on a keg of cold tank water at around 300kpa and its pretty well carbonated after a few days. Serving pressure doesnt really matter too much from what Ive noticed.
The main problem I had when trying this was pouring. I would literally end up with a glass of foam. I only had 2m of serving line and I think this was the problem. However I solved it alternatively by ensuring all my kegs are full of beer.
Hi all,
Thanks for your help so far. Can anyone let me know what serving pressure is ideal. I know Darren said carbonate it at 300kpa for a day or so..but Darren could you please let me know what pressure you found was good for serving?
I think what everyone here is trying to say to you is RELAX. you wont mess it up. Just experiment. I pour beer at 10 psi, so if I was to make a softdrink I'd start with that as a reference.
MD
EDIT: did you take AusdB's advice and do a google search?
I have a keg of soda-stream lemonade, and I just keep it at my normal beer pressure: ~15PSI
:icon_offtopic: Not really about SoftdrinkWhat u will find is it takes a long time for the c02 to come out of the beer
Steve
fill to the line with water, and carbonate.
As in just short of the Gas in tube? The top weld?
MD
Is there any diff? We are talking about carbonation arn't we? or does c02 come out of soft drink quicker than beer? and we are talking about c02 levels IN THE KEGNot really about Softdrink
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