The longer lines did the trick, homebrew coming out nice and smooth, the commercial beer is a little over carbed but that is ok it's a wheat beer ;) thanx for the help.
just think of the size of conical fermenter you could buy saving that kind of $ thats what I would do, start a saving jar and put the $4 a day into it and have a nice fermenter in a couple of months ;)
Here in the suburbs of Chicago, my favorite "candy" store is Binny's, great selection, fair prices, lots of hard to find singles, and tons of fat tire!
I have the same problem with my russian imperial stout, it has been in bottles for over 4 months, some have carb and some dont. maybe I didn't mix well enough in the bottling bucket or not enough priming sugar? I may try some carb drops and recap on some.
I had not thought of longer lines, I will try that first since beer line is cheap ;)
I will probably get the second regulator anyways but this could be a quick fix for the time being, thanx for the great idea, I'll post and let you know how it works.
keg.. pumpkin oktoberfest
secondary...
I have been having a problem with balancing my co2 pressure between my commercial keg (goose island 312) and homebrew keg (pumpkin oktoberfest) when I set the pressure at 12 psi for the 312 the homebrew comes out foamy and when I turn it down to 7psi the 312 tastes kinda flat. I am using a "y"...