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I do the same when I am not carbonating - both times it happened after I added fresh kegs and hooked them up to carbonate. I would have thought I'd be able to hear it a well, and I could have sworn I checked the duotight connections - but in the morning on both occasions a gentle pull actually removed the hose from one of he two new disconnects. (I am pushing them all the way in to the second click).

Don't know if I am doing something wrong with the duotights, or maybe worth replacing some of the connectors but I hadn't expected it to be so easy for gas to leak with this kind of setup as seems very widely used. Def could be a me issue.
I recently lost a bout a litre of beer through a leaking disconnect on liquid post.
Actually was not a problem with the disconnect. I thought it was probably a bad o-ring but when I went to replace it I found the problem was the machining of the post; I removed a sliver of steel (like a very thin, broken ring) which had not been cleaned off after manufacture.
 
Just brewed an Altbier it's fermenting away at 16C, got myself another Maxi, bargain at the moment $199!
IMG_1601.JPG
 
I just bottled an (alleged) APA (13.5L). First use of the new bottling gun. Didn’t carbonate the beer; primed the bottles for bottle conditioning.
Newfangled contraption went ok. Probably better than the old bottling wand and spigot. Either that or I’m just blowing a bit of CO2 into bottles for fun. I wonder if I’ll notice any difference.

I have a Dry Irish Stout (11L) on the bench, day 5.
Mainly I’m growing WLP004 for some more projects, but I’m still looking forward to having a ~4% Stout available. Reverted back to the old ‘classic styles’ series book by Michael Lewis (although the recipe section is all from Ashton ‘Mr Wizard’ Lewis). Nothing very remarkable in it but I took his advice and chopped up the flaked barley in a blender.
 
I have a bottling gun, but sadly I have not used it yet (10 years of dust). Interested to hear how your process went. I have a local guy just starting out wants to bottle.

My last Irish stout was developed from beer junkies on YouTube.
I do enjoy a clean stout and 004 is that indeed. I use 004 on a red Irish ale and then move it to a stout. Two birds one stone sort of thing.
 
I need to sort out the ‘time and motion’ aspect a little better. I set up the gun with a bit more line length than I really need but better too much than not enough.
I used a 4 litre oxebar keg to help me sanitise the beer line and purge the gas lines. That was fairly straightforward.
I used a demijohn as a resting place for the gun when I needed to set it aside.
I had a jam pan to hold my bottles as I filled them. The process was actually pretty clean but there’s always scope for a bit of spillage.
I set gas pressure to about 3psi, gave the bottles around 8 seconds gas (no idea if that’s enough or overkill) then filled with beer. The beer wasn’t totally flat as I used a spunding valve during fermentation. Consequently there was a little bit of foam. More than I’m used to, but bugger-all really.
Next time I might try bottling carbonated beer. I expect that might be more exciting. As an experience this was not really so different to bottling with a wand and spigot. Just more complicated with the hoses, and hand got a bit sore holding the trigger but that’s arthritis. Hopefully the CO2 injection into the bottle serves some beneficial purpose.

I’m planning to do a bottled Irish Extra Stout with 004. Haven’t used the yeast for decades and have almost forgotten what it’s like but thought I’d try it in a few small batches of various styles.
Irish Red is a style I think I’ve never attempted. I’ll probably do a Northern Brown, but now you’ve mentioned it I’m thinking about the IRA as a possibility.
 

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