Here are picturesSomeone may know, but I want to say there's a chance that your regulator could bleed pressure? Depending on where it is. It could be that you actually won't see over 10psi or so if the regulator is releasing it.
Do you have another picture of the setup? Or if you're familiar enough with everything then I'll just suggest to be sure the gauge is indeed reading the keg pressure and that's all, that there's not more tubing leading to a regulator that -might- (or might not) be bleeding some off.
Just a thought. not 100% sure about this.
(or scroll up). As you see the regulator is mounted right on the sodastream "tank" from which the short line goes to gas in post on the keg. I am no expert on how regulators work, so I cannot speak for if it releases excess pressure from the keg itself or if it just keeps more pressure from coming from the tank to the keg, depending on the regulator setting. As for now, I have the pressure completely cut off from the tank. It is still mounted on the tank but there is no way there is coming anything from it as of now. There is a separate "release pin" that needs to be screwed down for the pressure to come out of the bottle, even this have I wound all the way up.
Yes it does sound possible. As mentioned above I currently am not pressurizing at all and trying to figure out whether the gauge will give me another reading, a "how pressurized is the keg actually" - reading when the gas is completely off. Everything is in the fridge together.I think this is probably your biggest problem. 30 psi on one gallon of beer for that long is probably severely over-carbonated. Try bleeding off the keg pressure as others have mentioned then try to pour another glass after a few days. Be sure everything is inside your kegerator and cold and depress the picnic tap all the way on to pour. You might blow through your whole keg before you get everything dialed in this time. I’m a big believer in the set and forget method of carbonation… it’s quite foolproof
I am not too bothered about blowing through the keg for this experiment. This is 4L left over beer from a double batch I did together with a friend for a party that his student union is arranging. From my point of view it is free beer and a chance to test my keg for the first time.
I think I will do the set and forget next time though...