Ramp it up
Posted: Thu Aug 15, 2013 9:42 am
As you start using your Mr. Beer LBK, you'll notice a buildup of trub on the bottom as the beer ferments. This trub is good in that you're making beer but nasty when you go to bottle - it clogs things and is a great laxative...
To keep the trub out of the nozzle, many recommend putting something under the front of the LBK - magazines, block of wood, CD/DVD cases. I did the cases for a while but got tired of any minor overflow getting all over them. I also didn't like how the LBK could so easily slide off them. I kept my LBKs on cookie sheets so picking them up, on the CD/DVD cases, was even more precarious.
Not very handy, I decided to build ramps for my LBKs out of plywood that I had available. Measured the LBK, cut a piece of wood for the bottom to provide the incline, one on each side to stop it from sliding off, and then one position in the back so that the nozzle extends over the ramp. I can now pickup my LBKs, keeping them angled, and move them to the frig for cold crashing or the counter for bottling. I painted them with leftover deck stain. I keep them in a Rubbermaid tub so that I don't have to worry about spillovers or broken spigots (tub shown before I had the ramps. Tip - make sure that the tub is long enough for the LBK mounted on the ramp, and make sure you don't extend the LBK too far over the ramp so that you can't fit the whole thing in the tub.
To keep the trub out of the nozzle, many recommend putting something under the front of the LBK - magazines, block of wood, CD/DVD cases. I did the cases for a while but got tired of any minor overflow getting all over them. I also didn't like how the LBK could so easily slide off them. I kept my LBKs on cookie sheets so picking them up, on the CD/DVD cases, was even more precarious.
Not very handy, I decided to build ramps for my LBKs out of plywood that I had available. Measured the LBK, cut a piece of wood for the bottom to provide the incline, one on each side to stop it from sliding off, and then one position in the back so that the nozzle extends over the ramp. I can now pickup my LBKs, keeping them angled, and move them to the frig for cold crashing or the counter for bottling. I painted them with leftover deck stain. I keep them in a Rubbermaid tub so that I don't have to worry about spillovers or broken spigots (tub shown before I had the ramps. Tip - make sure that the tub is long enough for the LBK mounted on the ramp, and make sure you don't extend the LBK too far over the ramp so that you can't fit the whole thing in the tub.