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Funnily enough, I just went kegging and have a sodastream adaptor I used for the first time last weekend. It is massively more expensive to re-fill the sodastream compared to a CO2 keg.
Example:
sodastream refill $12, for 0.25kg or so
CO2 refill $20-$30 for 3.5kg
if you are drinking any sort of beer, go and get a bigger cylinder. It will pay for itself almost immediately.
First check you can get CO2 refilled in your area...and how much it costs but Co2 cylinders on TM and at Homebrew stores sell for a good price. A good regulator helps too.
There are also some 19L kegs going for $90 under the 'Buying and Selling'.. they don't come much cheaper.
Some info I found useful: HERE and HERE. Also FORCED CARB and BALANCING KEGS
Good trick I've just learned, after the fact, is to pressure test your manifold and keg charge lines and fittings by submerging them in a fermenter full of water with the CO2 connected. I discovered 5 leaky fittings on a new 4 way manifold. So it's not just second hand stuff that leaks. Another thing I saw when the tank was being filled was the guy used a CRC product called Leak Detector in a spray can and applied it to joints as it was filled. Repco appear to have it in some stores. It's $21 but that's cheaper than a 5kg tank of CO2.
I've also made a cheap delivery line cleaner from a $10 4L garden garden pressure sprayer. Allows the delivery lines to be cleaned without disassembly. Just disconnect them from the kegs and connect the sprayer to each line individually opening the valve until the cleaner flows out. Leave to sit a while then flush and sanitise before reconnecting the kegs.
cheers Steve
I'm having so CO2 leek problems. After 2 bottle going in about 1/2 the use I might expect from them. I shut all the valves on my manifold and pressurized the lines then turned the gas off every time I'm coming back to zero pressure no hiss no bubbles when I spray the joints. For now I'm blaming the cheap worm clamps on the hoses and have ordered a couple of bags of stepless clamps and a tool to fit them. Once there on I will use Steves trick and chuck it all in a bucket of water. Until then only turning gas on for dispensing. What a pain I have 4 full kegs and usually I can just squeeze 4 kegs and the gas bottle in my fridge but that makes the bottle more or less inaccessible so having to run my fermenting fridge as cold storage for one just so I can turn the gas on when I want a beer.
My leek isn't that fast I got a couple of months out of the last 2kg refill. It seems to be either manifold and/or line in as the kegs are all maintaining pressure still connected but turned off at manifold. And I thinks its safe to assume a leek this slow must be on the low pressure side of the regulator.
Those worm clamps are rubbish with the PVC lines they cut in and make a real mess of the line and their never perfectly round, I always get a little triangle of space where the housing for the screw meets the strap. So when the new clamps get here I will take the whole thing apart trim off the damaged ends of the hoses and put it all back together then look at the manifold before I screw it back on to the fridge. Probably not much point in testing anything now as I will have to do it again after. Just hope my clamps get here form china before I have a new keg to force carb, that will be a bigger problem.
Steve, Good call on testing the manifold. After changing the clamps I had just one leek on the end of the manifold with the plug. It took several attempts but got it all sealed up in the end. It may have just been the one leek but I wasn't happy with the worm clamps and wanted to replace them with stepless ones any way.
Daniel, Your welcome to come and have a look at my kegerator and see how Ive done things. You may have one already, I see this post is pretty old. I do have 2 recommendations:
1) 1/4" OD - 0.17" ID LDPE beer line rather than wider PVC stuff. You need less to balance the lines and LDPE won't taint your beer like PVC can. Its and absolute bitch to get the barbs into the narrow LDPE but once its done its done.
2) Stepless clamps rather than worm clamps. For my gas lines I'm using 9.5mm clamps on 5.5mm ID / 8mm OD PVC line out of the manifold and 13mm clamps on 6mm ID / 10mm OD PVC line between regulator and manifold because I couldn't get the barb on the regulator in to the narrower tube.
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