A:AnswerIt may, but you would have to cut a hole in your counter for the tap to go through it. Also check the height of your counter to the specs in the description to make sure it fits. Or you could cut a section of the counter out for the whole unit to fit. You will need to have access to the drip tray
A:AnswerI'm a homebrewer and this should work great. You have two options but I would talk about them with your husband before pulling the trigger.
Option 1: Buy a new Sanke 1/6th keg (Stout Tanks and Kettles is a good source). This will hook up directly to the kegerator with no modifications but will be a little harder to clean and fill.
Option 2: Buy a conversion kit for the kegerator and get a standard ball lock corny keg. You will have to cut the lines inside to install the adapter but the corny kegs are easier to clean and fill.
A:AnswerI've used it outside for short periods of time. Five-twelve hours max. It was about ninety outside. The beer was cold before putting it in the kegerator. I didn't have any issues. I wouldn't leave it outside for days on end though.
A:AnswerMaybe. I would measure your counter height and verify it against the specs listed. They were accurate for mine. The wheels do add a little bit of height, but I believe the measurements listed are without the wheels. Long as the measurements work, I don't see why not.
A:AnswerWatch for it to be one of the items on Deal of the Day. That's how I purchased it. Sign up for their emails and they will send their deals daily. You just need to check it everyday.
A:AnswerMine is roughly 33 3/8" tall (it has small screw-on feet in the front-those are included in that measurement)
23 5/8" wide
23 1/2" deep- but on the back, at the bottom there is a metal shield that sticks out and adds an extra 1 1/2" (this is probably removable, but I figure it's there for the unit to get air)
so actual depth is 25"