Gas regulator question
Posted: Mon May 14, 2012 10:52 am
Will a normal CO2 regulator work if it's feed line has already been reduced signficantly from the bottle pressure? Specifically, I need to reduce from 35 down to 18 psi. From briefly researching regulator specs, they seem to have a max inlet pressure rating, but nothing about a minimum input pressure.
Here's my connundrum. I need 2 separate serving pressures inside my kegerator (2 kegs at ~18psi for beer, 1 keg at ~35 psi for soda/seltzer water). My fridge doesn't have enough space to fit my CO2 bottle with a dual body regulator inside. It has a hole sized perfectly to run 1 gas line in from the outside, but I'd have to do a bit of modification to run 2 lines in parallel. I'd rather not do that, if it can be avoided.
So here's what I'm thinking: Split my regulator up to have one at the tank, set to the highest of the 2 pressures (35psi), then split the line inside, with 1 branch feeding into the soda keg, and another as the supply line for the second regulator body. The second regulator would be used to reduce from 35psi to 18, and it's output line would be branched off to feed the 2 beer kegs.
Just curious if this will work, or if I need a special type of regulator for this kind of fine tuning adjustment. Sounds more complicated after typing it out than it did in my head.
The other less attractive option I had thought of was mounting the dual body regulator inside the fridge, and running the CO2 direct from the bottle through the wall of the fridge (using brass pipe, to withstand the unregulated pressure). I don't like this idea since the tank mounting would be inflexible, and it seems like there is a lot that could go wrong with the relatively long & complex run of unregulated CO2 between the bottle & regulator.
Any thoughts, besides getting a bigger fridge?
Here's my connundrum. I need 2 separate serving pressures inside my kegerator (2 kegs at ~18psi for beer, 1 keg at ~35 psi for soda/seltzer water). My fridge doesn't have enough space to fit my CO2 bottle with a dual body regulator inside. It has a hole sized perfectly to run 1 gas line in from the outside, but I'd have to do a bit of modification to run 2 lines in parallel. I'd rather not do that, if it can be avoided.
So here's what I'm thinking: Split my regulator up to have one at the tank, set to the highest of the 2 pressures (35psi), then split the line inside, with 1 branch feeding into the soda keg, and another as the supply line for the second regulator body. The second regulator would be used to reduce from 35psi to 18, and it's output line would be branched off to feed the 2 beer kegs.
Just curious if this will work, or if I need a special type of regulator for this kind of fine tuning adjustment. Sounds more complicated after typing it out than it did in my head.
The other less attractive option I had thought of was mounting the dual body regulator inside the fridge, and running the CO2 direct from the bottle through the wall of the fridge (using brass pipe, to withstand the unregulated pressure). I don't like this idea since the tank mounting would be inflexible, and it seems like there is a lot that could go wrong with the relatively long & complex run of unregulated CO2 between the bottle & regulator.
Any thoughts, besides getting a bigger fridge?
