Amazon thinks I must want something called a carbonation stone. Because I've looked at home brew stuff in the past, I assume.
Anyway, I'm currently using a CO2 line to carbonate my batches. I connect it to the input and dial up the pressure to 8 or 10 lbs and after a day or two, the keg is carbonated. Works OK, though because the CO2 valve is so hard to make small adjustments on, I tend to get too little or too much carbonation a lot of the time.
But I'm wondering what a carbonation stone does. How does it factor into the setup? I'm using Korny kegs with pin locks on them and I'm not sure how I'd run a line into it with the stone attached to it. Would I run a line from one of the valves down into the brew and then crank up the CO2? How is this better or different than the approach I'm using?
Thanks,
JPK
Anyway, I'm currently using a CO2 line to carbonate my batches. I connect it to the input and dial up the pressure to 8 or 10 lbs and after a day or two, the keg is carbonated. Works OK, though because the CO2 valve is so hard to make small adjustments on, I tend to get too little or too much carbonation a lot of the time.
But I'm wondering what a carbonation stone does. How does it factor into the setup? I'm using Korny kegs with pin locks on them and I'm not sure how I'd run a line into it with the stone attached to it. Would I run a line from one of the valves down into the brew and then crank up the CO2? How is this better or different than the approach I'm using?
Thanks,
JPK