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I am moving away from my initial single BIAB pot system to a set of 3x 50L kegs. I am mainly doing this as 50L kegs seem to be very good value for their 50L size, easy to carry with the built in handles and should last a lifetime if looked after.
After doing a bit of research online, I have decided to polish them with an angle grinder and conditioning pads (known as "gator grit" pads in the US). I have found a NZ supplier of similar pads http://www.seearco.co.nz that fit small angle grinders. My plan is to start with the medium pad, move to the fine one, then polish with polishing wheels (not shown), starting with a cutting polish (white Hyfin) then a finishing polish wheel with a non cutting polish to give bling.
I will post photos
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Hey Peter, do you polish the inside of the kegs for sanitary reasons? Whats the go?
not necessary to polish inside but smooth = easier to clean
polishing a keg
I started undertaking the keg polishing project in February of 2008 and shared by results and process on Homebrewtalk as I went along. The thread grew to hundreds of posts and a lot of people were inspired to polish their kegs as well. Now that I've gone through a few different vessels, I'm putting this article together to share my process and some tips and tricks if you too want to require sunglasses to brew. By no means am I claiming to be a metal finishing expert or that my process is better than others. This article lays out how I do it and what I've come to learn about metal polishing in the process.
http://www.brewhardware.com/images/brew/polish/hltshine2.jpg" alt="hltshine2" width="546" height="273"/>
Original Condition:
Before you decide to undertake this project, you may want to look closely at the vessels you're starting with. This takes enough time, effort and money that you don't want to polish up a severly damaged keg because polishing doesn't remove dents and you may not be happy with the results. If you want show-piece results, at least start with a keg that is generally straight with only surface gouges and scratches. If you're lucky, sometimes nearly new kegs end up in the scrap yard too. Bottom line is, if you're picking through a scrap bin of sanke kegs and have your choice between a newer looking dented keg or a scratched up undented, select the latter. The image on the right is what I started with. Most of them had the same level of wear but no real dents or deep scratches. The one with the paint on it was probably the newest and least scratched.
Basic Tools
http://www.brewhardware.com/images/brew/polish/gatorbacking.jpg" alt="gatorbacking" width="87" height="119"/>http://www.brewhardware.com/images/brew/polish/gatorfine.jpg" alt="gatorfine" width="90" height="116"/>You're going to need some specialty tools to get this done but the good news is that you probably already have a few of them from cutting the top out of your keg:
How It Works
This is an important detail that you shouldn't skip over. Many people have tried to get a mirror finish only to be disappointed. There is a multi-step process that must be followed with no skipping around. You have to start with a coarse grit and work your way to a fine polish. How coarse you have to go will depend on how deeply scratched your metal is. Before I describe any more, the next drawing should help explain it well. (you can see a larger image by clicking on it
http://www.brewhardware.com/images/brew/polish/polishprocess.gif" alt="polishprocess" width="488" height="162"/>
Now that you understand what each of the steps would do to the original finish out of order, we'll talk about the step by step process and what it does in context of the drawing above. Understanding that the surface may need to get worse before it gets better, you start with the most aggressive grit that you need in order to get the deep scratches out first. If there are only a few isolated deep scratches on the surface, go ahread and work those areas only.
http://www.brewhardware.com/images/brew/polish/gatorfineresult.jpg" alt="gatorfineresult" width="109" height="140"/>From there go to the Fine pad and work the entire surface. If you run perpendicular to noticable scratches, you can easily see when you've gotten through enough metal to eliminate that scratch. If you get to a gouge that is taking too long to eliminate, you may want to circle it with a pencil and go back to those with the medium pad. Both finishing pads will create new scratches and swirl marks but it's the nature of the polishingbeast. You want to get out all the deep scratches as quickly as possible. One final pass with the fine pad using a lighter touch will buff some of the lighter scratches out that you've just created. Again, there will be no mirror surface but it will shine a bit. The picture on the right shows the result of the fine pad. Again, no deep scratches remain but it is swirled and patchy looking.
The picture on the left shows the correct polishing pad and what the polishing stick used to look like. You won't find the polish in this packaging anymore but the equivelent is still available. The #2 grit is relatively coarse as the polish goes. It won't take much work to remove the swirls from the previous step and you'll see some real shine coming out. Notice the reflection of the polish in the surface. After #2, change out the polishing pad and move on to the final #5 polish. This is where you get the mirror shine.
Tips and Troubleshooting
Yes, I have about 6 hours invested into two kegs but the way I see it, I only had to sacrifice a single all grain brew day. The surface cleans up more easily in the polished state than the matte finish. After about a year, the finish will dull just a bit and can be rejuvinated by a very brief retouch with the #5 polish.
They come up amazingly well
Direct fire or Electric?
The kettle is currently setup as direct fire from the guy I got it from, but I am going to convert to electric / pid with the 5500 watt ripple element, with same element in the HLT. The control panel will fire one or the other, not both at same time as per electric brewery. My plan is to mainly brew on this 50L system but I want the flexibility to swap out to a bigger MT / BK and still run the same control panel and HLT. I think electricity is fine at 50L but if I want to brew bigger I would go gas on the kettle like Scott B in Wellington, really like his setups.
I am pretty sold on stainless coil plumbed into the kettle to chill. I am about 90% sold on the idea of standard copper HERMS loop through the HLT (as I have the copper already). I need to go watch one of these in action, I have vague memories of Druid's copper loop and his HLT stirrer motor to keep temps even, but I have not yet got my head around how much the temp gradient needs to be between your HLT water temp and incoming wort temp to get effective wort heating, this obviously depends on pump LPM and length of the copper coil, but there is not much out there, any feedback from working HERMS systems here?
Do you recirc during the entire mash or just for temp control steps and at mash out? I guess that a continuous recirc means you dont need a vorlauf step as its happening all the time, just heat to mashout then start sparging.
Druid sort of persuaded me that a grant was the way to go, I am 50:50... was thinking of using a 89mm sanitary sightglass from aliexpress, replacing the glass with acrylic tube and using stainless float switches as a 600mm tube would give you quite a nice 1-1.2L per cycle grant. Replace the short threaded rods it comes with threaded stainless etc, its all about getting a good match on the acrylic to stainless fitting point, but this could be botched up with food safe silicone.
As I understand it once you break the long protein chains you cant put them back together, a sort of humpty dumpty analogy for non chemists..... I read the same thing for shake and bake force carbing corny kegs as well.
Some breweries use variable speed motors on the recirc/transfer pumps for this reason.... when we did the off flavour tasting thing at the Britomart Brew pub the brewer who ran the session commented that the small brewhouse there did not have variable speed pumps so you had to use partial pressure from values etc and how that was definitely not an optimal solution. I think steam brewing use a grant, as long as the grant pump was always fully primed, it would be a LOT more gentle on the wort, imagine whats going on inside a throttled back recirc pump on for a 60min mash... running at 1400 rpm
My observation is that in general nearly everyones homebrew is not as good as the pro's beer, there are exceptions... but the typical BJCP scoring distribution indicates this. We just don't know yet what really makes a different or not.
https://www.facebook.com/steambrewingco/photos/a.10152561175586763....
Now saying all that, there are probably a massive % of brew houses around who don't use a grant and make great clean beer. Bit like Catholic vs Presbyterian interpretation...... I was having a chat last night with a winemaker who said many pro beer brewers are opinionated, and in their brewery their way is the right way, yet they all make good beer with different methods.
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