Duckfoot
Well-Known Member
(Apologies if this has been covered previously)
After an extended airing out and drying process (read : I left about 16 cornies under the deck for a few, ahem, months) I noticed some had gotten a little funky inside... A good soaking in oxyclean cut most of the crud, but there were a few that still had some green grime in them... Since my arm is a tad bigger than the opening on the top, I grabbed my trusted stick and a rag and went to town... Halfway through the second keg, I thought "there must be a better way"....
Then I flashed back to something that might just work... One trip to Home Depot later, I had another one of these:
Cobweb brush. Oddly enough, it fits perfectly into a keg. Just attached it to the end of a paint stick, but am conjuring up a way to attached it to a drill to spin the bejebus out of it... Doesn't work all that well with the dip tubes in place, but it did the trick...
After an extended airing out and drying process (read : I left about 16 cornies under the deck for a few, ahem, months) I noticed some had gotten a little funky inside... A good soaking in oxyclean cut most of the crud, but there were a few that still had some green grime in them... Since my arm is a tad bigger than the opening on the top, I grabbed my trusted stick and a rag and went to town... Halfway through the second keg, I thought "there must be a better way"....
Then I flashed back to something that might just work... One trip to Home Depot later, I had another one of these:
Cobweb brush. Oddly enough, it fits perfectly into a keg. Just attached it to the end of a paint stick, but am conjuring up a way to attached it to a drill to spin the bejebus out of it... Doesn't work all that well with the dip tubes in place, but it did the trick...