MoreHopsPlease
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2013
- Messages
- 134
- Reaction score
- 9
Hi all,
While this is my first post here, I have been coming to this forum for the past month now for tips and ideas on how to build my keezer. And although I'm not into homebrewing yet (I hope to start sometime soon), I found this site to be a great help and was hoping you guys could help me out once again. But before I go any further, let me say that I've read most of the foam threads I could find through Google and haven't been able to solve my problem yet. With that said, here's my problem with a little background info first:
So I finished my Keezer on Saturday and went and picked up a keg. I was excited to get the beer flowing and the guy at the store said it's no problem to untap the keg, so I tapped it Saturday even though I knew I would be taking my keezer and the keg with me to school the next day, a 2 hour drive. At first the beer was really foamy, but as the keezer finished getting cold and I played around with the PSI, I was able to get some good pours, and I was eventually able to fill 3/4 of a growler with no foam issues.
The next day I untapped it, loaded it in a van (making sure to secure it) along with the Keezer, and made the 2 hour drive. After setting up the Keezer, my foam issues returned. No biggie I thought, the Keg just traveled over 100 miles and is probably still a little shaken. But by the end of the night I was still getting 90% foam pours. Thinking I might need some air circulation, I added a fan and tried again this morning. No good. So I checked for leaks and re-tapped the keg, but I'm still getting the same thing.
Here is my setup:
9 ft. 3/16" lines
Temp set to 38 degrees, 2 differential, with the probe in a jar of water on the hump
I have tried a PSI anywhere from 5-15 (with the other gauge reading 50/7500)
Taps are about 4 ft off the ground
With those settings I believe I was able to get the beer to pour right at about 12 PSI in my basement, but now that I'm in my apartment at school I haven't been able to get anything to work right. I don't know much about this stuff yet, so I could be doing something wrong when setting it up too, I don't know. Does anyone have any ideas? Any help would be appreciated, thanks!
While this is my first post here, I have been coming to this forum for the past month now for tips and ideas on how to build my keezer. And although I'm not into homebrewing yet (I hope to start sometime soon), I found this site to be a great help and was hoping you guys could help me out once again. But before I go any further, let me say that I've read most of the foam threads I could find through Google and haven't been able to solve my problem yet. With that said, here's my problem with a little background info first:
So I finished my Keezer on Saturday and went and picked up a keg. I was excited to get the beer flowing and the guy at the store said it's no problem to untap the keg, so I tapped it Saturday even though I knew I would be taking my keezer and the keg with me to school the next day, a 2 hour drive. At first the beer was really foamy, but as the keezer finished getting cold and I played around with the PSI, I was able to get some good pours, and I was eventually able to fill 3/4 of a growler with no foam issues.
The next day I untapped it, loaded it in a van (making sure to secure it) along with the Keezer, and made the 2 hour drive. After setting up the Keezer, my foam issues returned. No biggie I thought, the Keg just traveled over 100 miles and is probably still a little shaken. But by the end of the night I was still getting 90% foam pours. Thinking I might need some air circulation, I added a fan and tried again this morning. No good. So I checked for leaks and re-tapped the keg, but I'm still getting the same thing.
Here is my setup:
9 ft. 3/16" lines
Temp set to 38 degrees, 2 differential, with the probe in a jar of water on the hump
I have tried a PSI anywhere from 5-15 (with the other gauge reading 50/7500)
Taps are about 4 ft off the ground
With those settings I believe I was able to get the beer to pour right at about 12 PSI in my basement, but now that I'm in my apartment at school I haven't been able to get anything to work right. I don't know much about this stuff yet, so I could be doing something wrong when setting it up too, I don't know. Does anyone have any ideas? Any help would be appreciated, thanks!