Hey Everyone,
I'm pretty new to kegging and I'm having some issues with air bubbles in my beer line and foamy pours. Here's my set up and what I've tried so far:
Kegco 3 tap kegerator with digital temp control and 3 tap tower
Ball lock corny kegs
Kegco Primary 2 guage regulator (mounted outside of kegerator)
Kegco 4 product secondary regulator (inside kegerator)
I have the kegerator set for 41 degrees F. When I use my thermapen to measure the beer temp out of the faucet, it's about 43 degrees.
Pressure is set to 16psi for each of my kegs at the secondary regulator. Using the brewers friend keg pressure calculator (and adjusting for my elevation of 5000ft above sea level using New Belgium's charts as a guid), that pressure and temp should result in about 2.5 volumes of carbonation.
My beer lines are 10ft.
I do NOT have a fan to recirculate air inside the kegerator, or to blow cold air up the tower, but I do have insulation and reflectix inside and outside of the tower.
One of my kegs has only been carbonating at 16psi for about a week, so it's not 100% carbonated. The other keg has been on 16psi for about a month. That keg is pouring extremely foamy and tasting a bit flat in the glass. When I look at the beer line coming off the keg, there are quite a few bubbles in it that I cannot get out. I'm assuming this is my primary issue.
I've tried pouring the beer in the line out and seeing if the beer that replaces it still has bubbles. It does. I've tried degassing the beer thinking that it might be overcarbed, but that did not help and if anything, the beer just tastes even flatter now.
I don't think it's the temperature in my tower because if it was, I would assume the second consecutive pour would be better/different once the lines were cooled down by the beer. All pours are the same: foamy.
I have plenty of beer line (10ft) according to all the keg line balancing calculators I've tried, so I don't think that's the issue.
I just don't know where the bubbles in the line are coming from or how to get rid of them. Bad beer out post or poppet, maybe? I'm using keg lube on the gaskets so I'm getting a good seal at the ball lock disconnect.
Any ideas? I'm getting pretty frustrated and wasting a lot of a tasty IPA trying to figure this out.
Dan
I'm pretty new to kegging and I'm having some issues with air bubbles in my beer line and foamy pours. Here's my set up and what I've tried so far:
Kegco 3 tap kegerator with digital temp control and 3 tap tower
Ball lock corny kegs
Kegco Primary 2 guage regulator (mounted outside of kegerator)
Kegco 4 product secondary regulator (inside kegerator)
I have the kegerator set for 41 degrees F. When I use my thermapen to measure the beer temp out of the faucet, it's about 43 degrees.
Pressure is set to 16psi for each of my kegs at the secondary regulator. Using the brewers friend keg pressure calculator (and adjusting for my elevation of 5000ft above sea level using New Belgium's charts as a guid), that pressure and temp should result in about 2.5 volumes of carbonation.
My beer lines are 10ft.
I do NOT have a fan to recirculate air inside the kegerator, or to blow cold air up the tower, but I do have insulation and reflectix inside and outside of the tower.
One of my kegs has only been carbonating at 16psi for about a week, so it's not 100% carbonated. The other keg has been on 16psi for about a month. That keg is pouring extremely foamy and tasting a bit flat in the glass. When I look at the beer line coming off the keg, there are quite a few bubbles in it that I cannot get out. I'm assuming this is my primary issue.
I've tried pouring the beer in the line out and seeing if the beer that replaces it still has bubbles. It does. I've tried degassing the beer thinking that it might be overcarbed, but that did not help and if anything, the beer just tastes even flatter now.
I don't think it's the temperature in my tower because if it was, I would assume the second consecutive pour would be better/different once the lines were cooled down by the beer. All pours are the same: foamy.
I have plenty of beer line (10ft) according to all the keg line balancing calculators I've tried, so I don't think that's the issue.
I just don't know where the bubbles in the line are coming from or how to get rid of them. Bad beer out post or poppet, maybe? I'm using keg lube on the gaskets so I'm getting a good seal at the ball lock disconnect.
Any ideas? I'm getting pretty frustrated and wasting a lot of a tasty IPA trying to figure this out.
Dan