Hmm well mine is more like 3-4 maybe even 5 ounces before any carbonation shows up.
I feel like your beer line is way to long. i would go for 4,5-6 feet at 15 psi[...]
both use 3/16 line with a resistance of 3psi/feet.
[...]
I feel like your beer line is way to long. i would go for 4,5-6 feet at 15 psi
I feel like your beer line is way to long. i would go for 4,5-6 feet at 15 psi
I have a calculator for this, but it's in metric units and in dutch... I'll try to make a translated version when i have the time.
so with a temperature of 36°F (2.2°C) and 3 vol. CO2 you need 1,05 bar or 15.2 PSI.
Beer line: I don't have all the information available cause i would need to know the distance between the middle of the keg and the tap (height) for a accurate calculation.
I'm gonna do 2 calculations one with a distance of 1 foot and one with a distance of 2 feet.
both use 3/16 line with a resistance of 3psi/feet.
1 foot: beer line with a length of 4,3 feet
2 feet: beer line with a length of 4,1 feet
You need shorter line to get the beer to the tap if you don't want to increase the pressure.
God i hate converting units.
I really don't understand why you drink your beer so cold tho. 48°F is the ideal beer temperature. But hey if you like it who am i to tell you otherwise
And as a answer to the previous post. He's right the pressure doesn't drop in the line. But that doesn't mean the beer won't go flat. In the keg the beer stays carbonated in the line the beer goes flat because the CO2 escapes from the beer because the beer is heating up once it leaves the keg. With a length of 14 feet that means he has a lot of flat beer in his lines.
Yes but, how/where does the carbonation escape? Also the beer cant be heating up because the lines are entirely in the keezer.
As for the length i was thinking about reducing the length despite using this length based on what that site (that others also recommended) told me. I have a neighbor that brews beer as well and he said he uses short line lengths like that and doesnt have an issue (or at least noticeably i assume, as youd have much less lost carbonation in that length).
As for temperature i didnt give it much thought. It was partially so i didnt have to use as much PSI and use an even longer length of line and partially because that just seemed right. I could try a little warmer but i dont want to go up and down on temps for the whole kegs too much. 48 sounds really warm though.
Yes but, how/where does the carbonation escape? Also the beer cant be heating up because the lines are entirely in the keezer.
As for the length i was thinking about reducing the length despite using this length based on what that site (that others also recommended) told me. I have a neighbor that brews beer as well and he said he uses short line lengths like that and doesnt have an issue (or at least noticeably i assume, as youd have much less lost carbonation in that length).
As for temperature i didnt give it much thought. It was partially so i didnt have to use as much PSI and use an even longer length of line and partially because that just seemed right. I could try a little warmer but i dont want to go up and down on temps for the whole kegs too much. 48 sounds really warm though.
I second day_trippr's comment. Do not listen to this guy. 4 feet at 15 psi will give you nothing but foam, and lots of it.
Well the carbonation doesnt really have to escape, the beer in the line will lose it's carbonation and the CO2 will go up to the top of the line (near your tap) where it might gather.
When you open your tap does any air come out or does the beer flow instantly?
That's a classic recipe for horrible pours.
The only beer line length calculator worth using will tell you why.
http://www.mikesoltys.com/2012/09/17/determining-proper-hose-length-for-your-kegerator/
Cheers!