AnotherKiwiBrewer
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2018
- Messages
- 25
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Hi all -
based on the success of one of my first threads on this fine forum, I need the crowd's expertise again...
First off, I have spent a bit of time reading and searching, i'm a n00b to this forum but not forums in general and know the etiquette
That doesn't mean i didn't miss something staring me in the virtual face!
I have foam, foam and more foam out of my kegerator build.
Upright fridge, various line lengths (all 6mm or 1/4" ID) 3 kegs and three intertap flow control taps. 2 different beers and a cider. For testing all kegs are at 36deg and 10 psi.
What i have tried:
- Dropping a keg to 5psi - about the minimum where it would flow thru to the tap! FOAM.
- Changing a FC tap to normal one - FOAM
- Swapping all three beer lines around to prove that it's not one in particular. long or short, they all produce FOAM.One of the lines i changed to be 16 feet long as a test - still foam.
I notice that there seems to be bubble in the beer line from near the keg all the way to the taps. I can run many pints out and the bubbles are still there, so my current theory is that air is gettign in somewhere at the start of the line or the keg is overcarbed.
Given that i have swapped around 3 beer lines i think it's unlikley all three have air leaks at the keg coupler or line or somethign on the keg itself.
So - on the overcarbed theory i released all pressure from one of the kegs, will let it sit a few hours and then only put 1 or 2 psi on and see what happens. is this a valid test?
Also to eliminate any issue with the taps or lines, i tried a 7 foot line with picnic tap - foam.
Surely this means it has to be the keg or the beer? And all three kegs seems unlikely...
Ideas welcome - i want to drink beer, not foam!
based on the success of one of my first threads on this fine forum, I need the crowd's expertise again...
First off, I have spent a bit of time reading and searching, i'm a n00b to this forum but not forums in general and know the etiquette
I have foam, foam and more foam out of my kegerator build.
Upright fridge, various line lengths (all 6mm or 1/4" ID) 3 kegs and three intertap flow control taps. 2 different beers and a cider. For testing all kegs are at 36deg and 10 psi.
What i have tried:
- Dropping a keg to 5psi - about the minimum where it would flow thru to the tap! FOAM.
- Changing a FC tap to normal one - FOAM
- Swapping all three beer lines around to prove that it's not one in particular. long or short, they all produce FOAM.One of the lines i changed to be 16 feet long as a test - still foam.
I notice that there seems to be bubble in the beer line from near the keg all the way to the taps. I can run many pints out and the bubbles are still there, so my current theory is that air is gettign in somewhere at the start of the line or the keg is overcarbed.
Given that i have swapped around 3 beer lines i think it's unlikley all three have air leaks at the keg coupler or line or somethign on the keg itself.
So - on the overcarbed theory i released all pressure from one of the kegs, will let it sit a few hours and then only put 1 or 2 psi on and see what happens. is this a valid test?
Also to eliminate any issue with the taps or lines, i tried a 7 foot line with picnic tap - foam.
Surely this means it has to be the keg or the beer? And all three kegs seems unlikely...
Ideas welcome - i want to drink beer, not foam!