captdavid
New Member
Not a home brewer, but we serve LOTS of craft beers, and build and maintain our own keg equipment. I see lots of questions on the forums concerning correct keg "gauge" pressures, beer line diameter and length. The Brewers Association Draught Beer Quality Manual http://www.draughtquality.org/f/DBQM_Full.pdf is available online as a pdf file and will tell you more than you ever wanted to know about draught systems. It covers lots of commercial applications such as glycol and beer pump systems that don't pertain to home systems but their chapter on "A matter of balance" explains the dynamics of carbonation and how the combination of temperature, applied or "gauge" pressure and system resistance combine to affect the pour quality. While the explanation can seem complicated, it is really quite simple as seen by the following example.
Beer Conditions:
o Beer temperature: 38°F
o Beer carbonation: 2.8 volumes of CO2 per volume of beer
o Dispense gas: 100% CO2
o Gas pressure needed to maintain carbonation = 14.5 psig
Static Pressure:
o Vertical lift = 5 ft. (Tap 5 ft. above the center of the keg)
o Static resistance from gravity = 5 ft. x 0.5 pounds/foot = 2.5 pounds
Balance
o Applied pressure of 14.5 psi must be balanced by total system resistance
o Since static resistance equals 2.5 psi, a total of 12 pounds of system resistance will be needed:
Restriction = 14.5 2.5 = 12 pounds
o To achieve this: 4 ft. of 3/16 polyvinyl beer line (choker) @ 3 pounds per foot = 12 pounds)
May save a lot of headaches trying to figure out why one will pour and not another. We use 1/6 sankey kegs and have spent the extra to regulate each keg as line conditions will vary dramatically depending on the keg carbonation volume
Also have some info on our systems including a thru the wall three tap kegerator on our patio and a home brew walkin cooler (34-40 degrees) we use to store products. Getting ready to build a 10 tap keezer for the front of the house in March.
Good Luck
Capt David ONeill
Tybee Island Ga
Beer Conditions:
o Beer temperature: 38°F
o Beer carbonation: 2.8 volumes of CO2 per volume of beer
o Dispense gas: 100% CO2
o Gas pressure needed to maintain carbonation = 14.5 psig
Static Pressure:
o Vertical lift = 5 ft. (Tap 5 ft. above the center of the keg)
o Static resistance from gravity = 5 ft. x 0.5 pounds/foot = 2.5 pounds
Balance
o Applied pressure of 14.5 psi must be balanced by total system resistance
o Since static resistance equals 2.5 psi, a total of 12 pounds of system resistance will be needed:
Restriction = 14.5 2.5 = 12 pounds
o To achieve this: 4 ft. of 3/16 polyvinyl beer line (choker) @ 3 pounds per foot = 12 pounds)
May save a lot of headaches trying to figure out why one will pour and not another. We use 1/6 sankey kegs and have spent the extra to regulate each keg as line conditions will vary dramatically depending on the keg carbonation volume
Also have some info on our systems including a thru the wall three tap kegerator on our patio and a home brew walkin cooler (34-40 degrees) we use to store products. Getting ready to build a 10 tap keezer for the front of the house in March.
Good Luck
Capt David ONeill
Tybee Island Ga