Bottle filling from Keg
Posted: Tue Jun 30, 2009 12:15 pm
I ran across this idea that I modified slightly...
Did you know that the tip on Perlick forward sealing taps unscrews? and that a keg dip tube will fit in and the tip can screw back on, with that dip tube's o-ring?
So I cut a dip tube about 11" long, which goes deep in the bottle or growler, and attached it as stated above to the tap, and filled. (flip-top bottles sanitized with Star-San and filled with CO2)
Problems:
1) Kegerator, I couldn't get a bottle over the tube because the top of the kegerator was in the way! (duh!)
2) So I connected it directly to the keg and started filling, forgetting that I have the pressure balance for 5 feet of 3/16" low foam tubing (about 10 psi). Now I need very little pressure, so my first fill was very foamy! Bled the pressure and subsequent fills worked much better.
3) Price. Unless you have these things laying around, a $40 perlick tap, $13 dip tube and a $5 QD to tap adapter, the investment is really close to the price of a Beer gun. I suppose it could be made with a foot of 5/16" copper and a plastic ferrule, too, then could bend it enough for clearance on the kegerator.
Results:
I will try the beer when I get home today and see. It works better than 5/8" IO plastic tube that fits over the perlick tap because while it works for growlers, it doesn't fit in the opening of a beer bottle very well.
Did you know that the tip on Perlick forward sealing taps unscrews? and that a keg dip tube will fit in and the tip can screw back on, with that dip tube's o-ring?
So I cut a dip tube about 11" long, which goes deep in the bottle or growler, and attached it as stated above to the tap, and filled. (flip-top bottles sanitized with Star-San and filled with CO2)
Problems:
1) Kegerator, I couldn't get a bottle over the tube because the top of the kegerator was in the way! (duh!)
2) So I connected it directly to the keg and started filling, forgetting that I have the pressure balance for 5 feet of 3/16" low foam tubing (about 10 psi). Now I need very little pressure, so my first fill was very foamy! Bled the pressure and subsequent fills worked much better.
3) Price. Unless you have these things laying around, a $40 perlick tap, $13 dip tube and a $5 QD to tap adapter, the investment is really close to the price of a Beer gun. I suppose it could be made with a foot of 5/16" copper and a plastic ferrule, too, then could bend it enough for clearance on the kegerator.
Results:
I will try the beer when I get home today and see. It works better than 5/8" IO plastic tube that fits over the perlick tap because while it works for growlers, it doesn't fit in the opening of a beer bottle very well.