Kaiser442
Active Member
I've been doing a ton of reading on balancing my kegging system, but I'm still having a major foam problem. Right now I'm trying to get my root beer tap squared away while I'm waiting for my honey brown to finish in the secondary.
At first, I heard that I should carbonate at one pressure, and then serve at a low pressure, but my reading led me to the more enlightened view of keeping the keg at the "right" pressure and having enough line resistance to counteract all but about 1psi of the pressure (been to the Crockett brewing page to calculate line length, memorized the CO2 volumes VS pressure VS temp tables etc).
So, I've got my regulator set at 30psi (remember, this is root beer - I'll do 12psi or so for the real beer), the fridge is in the 30's, and I put on 20 feet of 3/16" hose.
The change to the long hose helped, but I was still pouring too much foam - so I did some more reading on here and found that a lot of people run 30-40 feet of hose for root beer! I also found the thread about putting those little plastic mixing sticks from McMaster-Carr in the dip tube of the corny keg.
So, I dropped two of those in - and now I'm getting half foam and half air!
Maybe I should have just done one.... or maybe I'm being too impatient. I just made up this batch of root beer last night (1.5 gallons in a corny keg) and it's not finished carbonating yet... maybe that makes a difference.
Anyway - I feel like I've gone to great lengths to do my research and get this right - and all I've got is a very expensive foam generator.
I REALLY want to get this right before the real beer is done
Thanks for reading my rant - any advice from the old timers would be greatly appreciated.
Oh - might as well slap up some pics!
At first, I heard that I should carbonate at one pressure, and then serve at a low pressure, but my reading led me to the more enlightened view of keeping the keg at the "right" pressure and having enough line resistance to counteract all but about 1psi of the pressure (been to the Crockett brewing page to calculate line length, memorized the CO2 volumes VS pressure VS temp tables etc).
So, I've got my regulator set at 30psi (remember, this is root beer - I'll do 12psi or so for the real beer), the fridge is in the 30's, and I put on 20 feet of 3/16" hose.
The change to the long hose helped, but I was still pouring too much foam - so I did some more reading on here and found that a lot of people run 30-40 feet of hose for root beer! I also found the thread about putting those little plastic mixing sticks from McMaster-Carr in the dip tube of the corny keg.
So, I dropped two of those in - and now I'm getting half foam and half air!
Maybe I should have just done one.... or maybe I'm being too impatient. I just made up this batch of root beer last night (1.5 gallons in a corny keg) and it's not finished carbonating yet... maybe that makes a difference.
Anyway - I feel like I've gone to great lengths to do my research and get this right - and all I've got is a very expensive foam generator.
I REALLY want to get this right before the real beer is done
Thanks for reading my rant - any advice from the old timers would be greatly appreciated.
Oh - might as well slap up some pics!



