TsunamiMike
Well-Known Member
Depends how you have it setup, if your lines are inside your keezer and you open up the top to grab the picnic tap and pour and put them back then you wouldn't have foaming issues.
The issue with taps in general are the tap portion being at room ambient temperature, lets say 70 degrees in your room. When you go to pour from your tap, the Co2 is pushing 37-40 degree beer into a faucet that is at 70 degrees therefore creating foam. Now lets say you pour 1 pint that way, now your faucet is "cooled" down from the 70 degrees closer to the beers temp so if you pour another immediately or within 15 minutes life is good but remember that the faucet is going to start warming back up after every pour.
The issue with taps in general are the tap portion being at room ambient temperature, lets say 70 degrees in your room. When you go to pour from your tap, the Co2 is pushing 37-40 degree beer into a faucet that is at 70 degrees therefore creating foam. Now lets say you pour 1 pint that way, now your faucet is "cooled" down from the 70 degrees closer to the beers temp so if you pour another immediately or within 15 minutes life is good but remember that the faucet is going to start warming back up after every pour.