I'd suggest if it gets delivered damaged, don't sign for it and refuse delivery. I think if you sign for something that's damaged, which should be pretty noticable, ......
Sure, I wouldnt take delivery if it was noticeable, but that is the real question. Can anyone describe how these are packaged and what the shortfalls are? eg is there sufficient packaging material protecting the corners and spacing the carton away from the flat sides of the unit?
The corners are well protected, they use those plastic/metal corner covers which go over the foam padding to stop the corners getting knocked. The sides had plenty of room, mine was dented because they put a forklift through the packaging, not much you can do to stop that but any normal kicks hits and what not would have been fine. But this was bought from pinnacle.
I'll post my subsequent steps. Which at this stage might start with a purchase of the eBay one with the $35 insurance fee added.
I bought a kegerator off ebay over the last month.
The fridge, regulator, tap, font have all been good. The main problem was that I had to buy new gas and beer lines plus more clamps for them.
Beer line was way too wide for 19 litre kegs. I don't know if 50 litre kegs require a wider beer line, (probably not) but it was just foaming up heaps with the larger line.
Anyway, once I got the slimmer lines and some disconnects, it all pretty much came together well.
I reckon I'd possibly go the other route of buying a slightly smaller bar fridge and modding it, and buying all the other parts seperate. But... It's still really good.
might do the same at some stage. These elbow shanks look like a disaster waiting to happen. Thanks for the good news!You should be able to as the threads on the original shanks are most likely the same. I'm using perlick taps but I did also get new stainless elbow shanks instead of using the ones that came with the font.
Could you put a flooded font on one of these? Obviously you wouldn't be able to have sub-zero glycol pumping around as there is no freezer, but could you just pump cold water around? eg. put a little water reservoir in the fridge with an aquarium pump?
from my understanding, you could not easily flood the existing post. It attaches via a flange with screws to the to of the fridge and has a removable post top. Other fonts could be attached but would likeley protrude into the fridge, costing you a keg space.
do you think it would work - just pumping 4 degrees water from the fridge through the font?
I imagine that it would have an effect, but you have to weigh up the return versus the cost/effort. I am upgrading the insulation in font to include some thick black trunking around the beer lines. You'll probably always get a bit more froth on the first beer of the day but with good insulation that shouldnt be a big problem after the first beer.
Out of curiosity, do you have your keg system balanced? I am in the process of balancing mine. I have 2.5M of 5mm ID flexmaster II on each tap and at the pressure that I used to use in my old converted fridge (about 9-10 PSI or 62-69 kPa) the pour is a bit too slow, the beer is not 'solid' or the full diameter of the tap as it leaves the tap. I am putting any foam issues down to a combination of that and the temperature of the font at the moment. I need to either shorten the line or increase the pressure.
Cheers
EDIT: I Did see a post on here somewhere; someone had put a computerfan inside the bottom of the fridge and blew cold air up a flexible electrical conduit to the font. They used a party baloon with the end cut off as a manifold between the fan and the conduit. That might be easier than messing with pumps and water.
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