bmbigda
Well-Known Member
i started with 5 feet at everywhere from 8-12 PSI and it was nothing but foam, when i added the additional length that balanced it out much better. no it doesnt get better with additional glasses, it pours well for a second or two, then a quick spurt of foam, then good beer again.
I have some experience with your issue. I started this thread in Dec 2010.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/f35/pouring-glass-keg-beer-foam-beer-161109/
When I started that thread, I was relatively new to kegging, and have sinced filled and emptied many more kegs. I never had that problem again.
I use homebrew kegs, but the possibilities remain the same regardless. I don't agree that a blockage or leak could cause this, because you would see it throughout the duration of the pour.
You mentioned that this is not only happening with the first pour, but also all subsequent pours. That tells me it is not a beer line or kegorater temperature issue. If it was a temp issue, the first couple pours would run through the lines and faucet and bring everything to a relatively similar temperature. So if you pour 3 beers one after the other, and you still see this issue - I highly doubt it is a temperature problem.
That leads to my suggestion for your problem - overcarbonated beer. While I admit I couldn't explain why overcarbonated beer causes the "beer-foam-beer" pour, I do know that once I became anal retentive about my temperature, pressure, and keg handling, I never had that problem again.
Take a look at this chart if you haven't see it yet: http://www.kegerators.com/carbonation-table.php
You said you were at 12 PSI and 38 degrees. As I'm sure you know, that's going to be a perfect carbonation level and should not cause a problem. That being said, is it possible that while trying to solve your foaming issue, you may have had the keg hooked up to a higher pressure for several days? Also worth asking if you know to purge the pressure in the keg prior to lowering the regulator's pressure? It seems obvious but is worth asking, some people think simply lowering the regulator will lower the pressure, but as long as the keg is sealed shut and the carbonation is in solution, the pressure will not lower unless you purge it out.
The best way to solve this problem is to off gas the keg for a few days, hook it up to a lower pressure (maybe like 8 PSI) and see if the problem persists. Also trying a different keg would help.