• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Ok, so I'm kind of freaking out

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

The Pale Horse

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 17, 2008
Messages
172
Reaction score
2
Location
South of Detroit
Just to start off, I know I know, I need to relax and just have a homebrew, but my homebrew is in a keg that isn't carbed and isn't going to be unless I fix whatever problem I have :(

Problem: Beer is not carbed

Procedure: cleaned the keg, sanitized the keg, siphoned beer, lubed the O-ring, put the top on the keg and put about 5 lbs of co2 on the keg, burped it a few times, disconnected the co2, and put it in the fridge, came back later when it was cold enough, reconnected the co2, cranked up the co2 to about 30lbs and rocked the keg for a few minutes on my knee, put it back in the kegerator, came back a couple hours later to lower the pressure and the co2 bottle felt light, so I burped it and no sound, nothing, absolutely no pressure what so ever

So, what do I do now? This is the first time I've tried to keg, I've tried to read as many threads as possible and get help from my LHBS

I would love to RDWHAHB, but I'm starting to freak out

Thanks in advance
 
I did, or at least tried, I'm going to refill the co2 tomorrow and recheck it, I guess the other thing I would assume is my regulator is leaking somewhere
 
If it's a used Corny, check the pressure-relief valve on the lid. I've had quite a few of them go bad over the years. They will hold pressure initially, then start leaking 15-20mins later. Lame, I know.
 
If it's a used Corny, check the pressure-relief valve on the lid. I've had quite a few of them go bad over the years. They will hold pressure initially, then start leaking 15-20mins later. Lame, I know.

+1 on the relief valve. Make sure it is tight. With most kegs it is threaded and can work it's way loose.
 
If you don't get it figured out you could also siphon in to your bottling bucket and bottle the batch. I know it's not what you want to do but it's better than possibly infecting the beer by fiddling with it a bunch.
 
Back
Top