How fast?I can definitely notice the beer start to drop off when it gets hooked up to the tank gas for serving.
How fast?I can definitely notice the beer start to drop off when it gets hooked up to the tank gas for serving.
Typo? The reference that they took the table from says ppm.The bad news is that I have no idea where their 30 ppb number comes from. A little Googling instead gives 30 ppm as a typical value, though that's a maximum and not typical value.
There's a pretty universal consensus 'round these parts that EVA or other barrier tubing is necessary for liquid lines. Plenty of people will tell you it is necessary for gas lines, as well. My personal experience (anecdote does not equal data) is that PVC gas lines (and, for that matter, tank O2) don't cause a severe oxidation problem, at least as measured by my own taste and the taste of judges at competitions I enter, at least for non-hoppy beers.Well, all this has got me thinking I ought to get EVA lines, especially for the one from gas tank to kegs. I picture it now sitting there coiled around the tank in the cellar, absorbing O2 and plotting to stale my beer...{ ; Good thing I tend to drink it pretty fast once tapped. .
I think this is a pretty fair statement. I just ordered a spunding valve because of this thread.So if one is in pursuit of quality enough to be worried about EVA lines and Buna-N seals, one also ought to consider spunding. Using gas from "over spunded" kegs to help dispense seems a good practice too, but will only get one so far.
Well, all this has got me thinking I ought to get EVA lines, especially for the one from gas tank to kegs. I picture it now sitting there coiled around the tank in the cellar, absorbing O2 and plotting to stale my beer...{ ; Good thing I tend to drink it pretty fast once tapped. .
A lot of things about brewing can be seen as rabbit holes, or can be seen as things that could be improved, even if only incrementally at some point. For me this is better than being content with the other extreme; making and drinking mediocre beer year after year...
How pure tanked CO2 probably varies, may not live up to published specs, and there's always plenty of room for quality control lapses at the bottling plant. Pretty sure what I get and lots of others get is industrial grade. The only gas in separate category from the different industrial/welding gas choices I have seen is the medical oxygen.
Maybe the CO2 that beverage distributors supply is beverage grade, it came from a different supply chain when I was in restaurant business. But no way would the Coca Cola dealer sell it to me now unless I was buying their soda syrup and leasing their dispensers.
So if one is in pursuit of quality enough to be worried about EVA lines and Buna-N seals, one also ought to consider spunding. Using gas from "over spunded" kegs to help dispense seems a good practice too, but will only get one so far.
I have multiple of the duotight ones and love them. I use them at the end of my daisy chain so CO2 from my All Rounder during fermentation is pushing Star San out of a keg that wall filled to the brim. That star san is being pushed into another empty cleaned all rounder and then the gas post for the star san all rounder has a spunding valve attached to it. that way i'm using fermentation co2 to purge my clean star san keg and not store bought CO2 and then my next fermenter is also being sanitized in the process and the starsan is kept in a CO2 only closed environment further extending it's shelf life.I have floating dip tubes ready to go, too! So do folks like this metal one, or this Duotight one, or something else?
I basically noticed this as well. The first couple ounces or whatever poured since the previous night were not sweet and lacking hop flavor after my change to EVA. I'd pick up pretty much where I left off. This got me to switch the other keg line and the CO2 line as well.In the past, I would always purge the beer in the beer line as those first few ounces in the line always tasted off. This was the biggest thing I noticed with the EVA. The beer in the EVA line after going a day without drinking tasted the same. Nothing off. So I changed both beer/gas line to EVA/Duotight.
I’ve had some trouble with them. Gas ones not fitting on posts, liquid ones not releasing poppets when you take them off (mess!)
Kegland disconnects. They're sleek and low-profile, but both gas and liquid have given me problems.With what? Universal posts? Poppits? Kegland's disconnects? Don't know if you're replying specifically to me so thought I'd ask.
The set of universal posts/poppits I put on one of my kegs seem to work. I pressure tested it and it's still sitting at 10psi. I think the universal posts don't work with all kegs (according to More Beer), but most of my kegs are Super Champion and Challenger VI cornys if that helps.
Kegland disconnects. They're sleek and low-profile, but both gas and liquid have given me problems.
I would like to understand the physics behind this. If you are correct then it would seem any additional O2 molecules introduced into the higher pressure CO2 line would increase the pressure even further (more moles of gas total), which would seem to violate the Boyle's Law (among others). Everything I have read on permeability and diffusion seems to imply the pressure would cause things to move the opposite direction. E.g. This is how some gas separators work. In fact, Nitrogen would be much more likely to permeate into the line since it is both much more concentrated/higher partial pressure and also a lighter molecule. Obviously, without a pressure difference, an area of greater oxygen concentration would tend to move into an area of lower concentration (all the gases would mix in both directions until the partial pressure of each component is equal).Even if the ambient air pressure is far less than the CO2 pressure in the line, you will still get O2 going into the line, into the CO2 filled area.
The reason is because, strictly from the standpoint of the O2, there's some O2 outside of the line and therefore some O2 pressure outside of the line. But none inside the line. Lots of Co2 pressure inside, but no O2 pressure inside. And so the O2 will indeed permeate through the line and get inside until it balances out.
Google "partial pressure."I would like to understand the physics behind this.
It's true that people have been enjoying beer for thousands of years, but people have also been putting up with flat oxidized beer for most of that time.Actually, this entire thread and things like agonizing over ppm's of O2 and purging jumper lines with one thousandth the total volume has me wondering how people have actually been enjoying cask ales for thousands of years
Maybe this will help frame the problem.I would like to understand the physics behind this. If you are correct then it would seem any additional O2 molecules introduced into the higher pressure CO2 line would increase the pressure even further (more moles of gas total), which would seem to violate the Boyle's Law (among others). Everything I have read on permeability and diffusion seems to imply the pressure would cause things to move the opposite direction. E.g. This is how some gas separators work. In fact, Nitrogen would be much more likely to permeate into the line since it is both much more concentrated/higher partial pressure and also a lighter molecule. Obviously, without a pressure difference, an area of greater oxygen concentration would tend to move into an area of lower concentration (all the gases would mix in both directions until the partial pressure of each component is equal).
Actually, this entire thread and things like agonizing over ppm's of O2 and purging jumper lines with one thousandth the total volume has me wondering how people have actually been enjoying cask ales for thousands of years, not to mention the recent explosive popularity of barrel aged beers.![]()
Hmmm, what I see are statements that "partial pressure" describes the contributions of individual gas components on the combined pressure of a mixed gas (usually relating the two for a specific absolute pressure). I don't see any formula (or experiment) that demonstrate this given a continually supplied pressure difference (other than blanket statements to that effect on forums). All the supported arguments I can find having to do with O2 intrusion include things about permeability and diffusion. The mixing of a specific gas from higher concentrations to lower concentrations is explained by the free, unhindered motion of gas molecules and the large space between gas molecules which is also why different gas mix. I also see articles demonstrating that absolute pressure differences affects (and can overcome) much of this interaction.Google "partial pressure."
It's true that people have been enjoying beer for thousands of years, but people have also been putting up with flat oxidized beer for most of that time.
I agree and think you're correct that there is a much higher chance and amount of oxidation happening to these BA beers, but I think the styles that are typically BA and the flavors the BA impart on the finished project are going to be much stronger then the sort of flavors a limited amount of oxidation will bring to those particular beers. This is just me implying some reasoning in my own mind and is basically my opinion so there is no research (that I'm aware of) to back this up, but to me it makes sense.Hmmm, what I see are statements that "partial pressure" describes the contributions of individual gas components on the combined pressure of a mixed gas (usually relating the two for a specific absolute pressure). I don't see any formula (or experiment) that demonstrate this given a continually supplied pressure difference (other than blanket statements to that effect on forums). All the supported arguments I can find having to do with O2 intrusion include things about permeability and diffusion. The mixing of a specific gas from higher concentrations to lower concentrations is explained by the free, unhindered motion of gas molecules and the large space between gas molecules which is also why different gas mix. I also see articles demonstrating that absolute pressure differences affects (and can overcome) much of this interaction.
I would not necessarily equate flat beer to oxidized beer. While I'm sure many would prefer their own homebrew to the cask ales of a century ago, some of the best beers I have had, as well some of the most expensive and most in demand beers I have seen professionally offered, are modern barrel aged ales (which likely introduces a billion times more risk for oxidation than the things discussed on these threads). I'm curious how this part of the industry is enjoying so much success and growth to where they can't age enough B.A. Quads and Wee Heavys, meanwhile a few ppb of O2 are destroying so many homebrews?
If O2 diffuses into a pressurized CO2 line, then it would seem the same could be said for fermentation purging of a keg over time. Wouldn't O2 permeate through the blowoff water and tube walls and then along that open channel inside the tube back into the keg, so that the keg is being continually replished with more O2 since there wasn't enough in there compared to the surrounding air???The counter-intuitive case you're proposing is that diffusion into a tube increases its pressure. In most cases this won't happen, because other gases will be diffusing out at the same time. In the extreme cases (say, helium through a glass tube), it does indeed happen, but to say that things get counter-intuitive in extreme cases doesn't refute the underlying principles.
...it's the O2 Gnomes... They delight in mining through barely porous material carrying oxygen and dumping in the brews of the O2CD brewers on here.If O2 diffuses into a pressurized CO2 line, then it would seem the same could be said for fermentation purging of a keg over time. Wouldn't O2 permeate through the blowoff water and tube walls and then along that open channel inside the tube back into the keg, so that the keg is being continually replished with more O2 since there wasn't enough in there compared to the surrounding air???
I can see where O2 can intrude (through the water and tube wall) once CO2 is no longer being produced, but it seems that the steady production of CO2 during fermentation is what keeps the O2 out. If I am missing something then please explain how this purging removes and then keeps O2 out, while a CO2 bottle can't?
I can undertand that the number of mols of different gasses on two different sides of a hose can be rearranged such that the partial pressures on boths sides are at equillibrium, and the aboslute pressures maintain the same different numbers you started with. But I don't underatnd what force casues those molecules of O2, for example, to diffuse throught that hose when there is higher pressure on the other side?
The no membrane case is explained by the rapid and unobstructed motion of gas molecules (i.e. mixing). And the case of a ballon deflating over time explains how molecules of a gas want to move in one direction through a membrane from a higher pressure to a lower pressure (rather than just the exchange of dissimilar molecules).
But what force physically moves molecules of a gas from low pressure, through a membrane into a high pressure area???
Hmmm, what I see are statements that "partial pressure" describes the contributions of individual gas components on the combined pressure of a mixed gas (usually relating the two for a specific absolute pressure). I don't see any formula (or experiment) that demonstrate this given a continually supplied pressure difference (other than blanket statements to that effect on forums). All the supported arguments I can find having to do with O2 intrusion include things about permeability and diffusion. The mixing of a specific gas from higher concentrations to lower concentrations is explained by the free, unhindered motion of gas molecules and the large space between gas molecules which is also why different gas mix. I also see articles demonstrating that absolute pressure differences affects (and can overcome) much of this interaction.
I would not necessarily equate flat beer to oxidized beer. While I'm sure many would prefer their own homebrew to the cask ales of a century ago, some of the best beers I have had, as well some of the most expensive and most in demand beers I have seen professionally offered, are modern barrel aged ales (which likely introduces a billion times more risk for oxidation than the things discussed on these threads). I'm curious how this part of the industry is enjoying so much success and growth to where they can't age enough B.A. Quads and Wee Heavys, meanwhile a few ppb of O2 are destroying so many homebrews?
If O2 diffuses into a pressurized CO2 line, then it would seem the same could be said for fermentation purging of a keg over time. Wouldn't O2 permeate through the blowoff water and tube walls and then along that open channel inside the tube back into the keg, so that the keg is being continually replished with more O2 since there wasn't enough in there compared to the surrounding air???
I can see where O2 can intrude (through the water and tube wall) once CO2 is no longer being produced, but it seems that the steady production of CO2 during fermentation is what keeps the O2 out. If I am missing something then please explain how this purging removes and then keeps O2 out, while a CO2 bottle can't?
I can undertand that the number of mols of different gasses on two different sides of a hose can be rearranged such that the partial pressures on boths sides are at equillibrium, and the aboslute pressures maintain the same different numbers you started with. But I don't underatnd what force casues those molecules of O2, for example, to diffuse throught that hose when there is higher pressure on the other side?
The no membrane case is explained by the rapid and unobstructed motion of gas molecules (i.e. mixing). And the case of a ballon deflating over time explains how molecules of a gas want to move in one direction through a membrane from a higher pressure to a lower pressure (rather than just the exchange of dissimilar molecules).
But what force physically moves molecules of a gas from low pressure, through a membrane into a high pressure area???
The concentration gradient of that specific gas across that membrane. You wouldn't be able to breathe if it didn't work this way.But what force physically moves molecules of a gas from low pressure, through a membrane into a high pressure area???
Not to go too far down a bunny trail, but the exchange of gases inside the lungs is a gas-to-liquid transfer across a membrane, and does not involve much pressure difference (the pressure difference existes to move air in and out of the lungs). If anything there would be higher pressure in the inhaled air tending to move gas into the avioli when you inhale, and then lower pressure on the air side of the membranes when you exhale tending to move CO2 out. The differing solubility for various gases in these tissues is also a factor.The concentration gradient of that specific gas across that membrane. You wouldn't be able to breathe if it didn't work this way.
Not to go too far down a bunny trail, but ... Attributing the final effect of equalizing gases on two sides of a barrier to "gases want to be the same everywhere" is popular, but cannot be explained with facts. (Sort of like people asserting that a plane can fly due to the airfoil shape of a wing). The gas on the outside of a hose isn't "motivated" to get to the other side because there are fewer molecules of that type inside the hose - it is simply random motion and statistics.
Or the possibility that some are believing something that isn't true and regurgitating it with nothing to prove it. A law of physics is explained with facts and backed by empirical evidence - as opposed to, say, an old wives tale.Well, there's always the possibility you can't believe something that's actually true and just don't really know you're talking about.