mikewildt
Active Member
Hey guys, I am tired of pouring out my first pour that comes out foamy and have finally decided to do something about it. This happens with both commercial kegs and corny keg homebrews. I plan on adding an EvaDry E500 dehumidifier to combine with a fan to circulate the air better. I created the same kegerator as many have on this forum a couple years ago with the wood collar etc, but am guessing that because of poor insulation from the wood the upper half of the kegerator's air is warmer than the bottom. Seems like the best thing to do from reading posts would be to get a fan to circulate the air better.
Exactly what fan should I get? I have read of people using both AC powered fans as well as computer fans, but what do people prefer and what is safest to have in a potentially humid environment? Again I will be getting that Evadry to help with the humidity but still want to make sure I'm not risking any kind of electrical issue with the fan in there.
This seems decent but I have no idea how it would survive in the kegerator.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009OXMZ3Y/?tag=skimlinks_replacement-20
Also is there anything else that people recommend to help solve the common problem of the first pour being foamy, and then every one after being fine? I also read in one place that longer lines can help that, I currently have 5 foot lines.
Any additional tips would be much appreciated!
-Mike
Exactly what fan should I get? I have read of people using both AC powered fans as well as computer fans, but what do people prefer and what is safest to have in a potentially humid environment? Again I will be getting that Evadry to help with the humidity but still want to make sure I'm not risking any kind of electrical issue with the fan in there.
This seems decent but I have no idea how it would survive in the kegerator.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009OXMZ3Y/?tag=skimlinks_replacement-20
Also is there anything else that people recommend to help solve the common problem of the first pour being foamy, and then every one after being fine? I also read in one place that longer lines can help that, I currently have 5 foot lines.
Any additional tips would be much appreciated!
-Mike
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