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oxidation question

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walker111

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I brew double batches and keg . When I put a keg in keezer all is good and great beer flows. It seems the second keg that sits on a second co2 system in spare bedroom is becoming oxidized. It has happened a few times and always the second keg. These kegs can sit for some time , even a few months, but under pressure in a keg. I am miffed on this one. O2 getting in somewhere I assume. The degree of oxidation is lower but I notice it and smell it in a glass. All my beers are closed transferred . Any ideas?
 
With positive pressure inside, outside air shouldn't get in. Only thing I can think of is O2 impurities in your CO2. Even a small percentage of O2 could cause oxidation when under pressure.

Edit: is that 2nd keg connected via a longer gas line than the first? Maybe some air still in the lines got pushed into the keg when you first turned on the CO2?
 
Thanks for your reply. That was a thought of mine. It has happened to 3 kegs in the past year. I have had oxidation prior in a few cases but this was years ago and before I closed transfer.
 
Aging is going to happen faster at room temp than fridge temp. Are the ones in the spare room refrigerated?

Maybe there's a point in your process that isn't ideal and is allowing more O2 in? Seems like you're good enough for the time it takes to use up the first keg, so it might be a smaller problem that's causing the long term storage issues.

Is your cold side completely sealed from yeast pitch to consumption? If not, look to the places where it's open for improvement. How are you purging your serving kegs?
 
What material is your gas tubing made from. Switching to EVABarrier might make a noticeable difference.
This is good advice. Even though there is positive CO2 pressure in the gas line, O2 will still diffuse into the line, because the CO2 pressure does not affect the internal O2 partial pressure, and it's the difference in O2 partial pressures that drives O2 into the gas line.

Another thing you could do is disconnect the gas line after the beer has been carbonated. Then you would only have to worry about O2 diffusing into the gas line during the carbonation period, so less O2 overall.

Brew on :mug:
 
IF they sit in another room, I am thinking they are not on a gas tank line but literally sitting there.
Makes me think more the temperature is accelerating the process with these extra kegs that the chilled kegs don't see.
 
Hi all
Thanks for all who chimed in. The kegs not in keezer sit in spare bedroom in basement on a second co2 system at generally 20 psi as this room hovers around 16-18 degrees. I keep this room on a heater when fermenting. They sit in this condition until one in keezer is done and I move it over. Closed transfers for all beers and only time not in closed off system is when I dry hop and make sure to do this when there is fermenting still taking place . Fermonsters will lids I adapted with gas and beer posts.
I don't cold crash. I have but not these beers in question. The gas lines on second system are about 4 ft in length. The beer line tubing name escapes me right now and I am not at home. Bevex 3/16 maybe????
 
I'd consider getting the beer into the keg via your closed loop, probably doing the "purge liquid out of it with CO2" thing first. Then do a quick force carb - I roll mine on the floor at about 15psi for ~ 10 minutes until no more gas will go in (I stop hearing it go through the regulator). After that unplug it from the CO2 and let it sit, carbed, and totally closed. I'm agreeing w/ an earlier post you might have O2 going in through that line you have connected. Even under CO2 pressure the O2 will work its way in.

Time isn't helping either of course so the less O2 you can get in up front the better!
 
Depending on the beer you are brewing you could just prime that second keg and leave it to condition. The yeast would use up any oxygen that had got in there during your process.
You wouldn't keep carbonating a bottled beer once sealed after all.

Not sure why your sealed keg needs to stay on CO2; as mentioned by others it could just introduce tiny amounts of oxygen that will cause you trouble.
Other things to consider would be preventative measures for that keg such as sod met, ascorbic acid. There's been plenty about this recently and seems to be a brewing hot potato for a while now.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/threads/vitamin-c-the-game-changer.698328/
 
I would add a few things:

EVA Barrier tubing is great. Used with the Duotight system it is the best homebrewers can do.

Bottled CO2 gas that we have access to includes O2 gas. It is just a sad reality. Pure CO2 is special lab grade or is produced by yeast.

Try spunding or keg priming instead of using bottled CO2 to carbonate. Only use the bottle for serving.
 
After I transfer closed, I bup the keg 3-5 times while the gas is hooked to purge. Prior to the transfer, after the keg is cleaned I leave 1/3 full of starsan and use co2 to push this out and emplty the keg.
Looks like I am leaving them on the co2 too long. Maybe I will try to carb these kegs up for a week and disconnect and let them condition at room temperature.
 
I'd fill the keg completely and then purge the starsan out ideally with ferment gas if not CO2 and then divert your gas from your ferment thru the keg to wash away as much O2 as possible.
You'll probably get some slow conditioning over a few months with some yeasts, especially English ale types that can keep munching away albeit slowly for a long time.
After all if it's not carbed enough when you crack the keg you can always force it then.
 
These are complicated procedures. "Closed Transfer" can mean different things to different people. For your use case, closed transfer should be complete O2 free environment to another complete O2 free environment. Research and experience has shown the burping technique is not as good as we want it to be. So the best way is to hook the keg up to your fermentation gas output (natural CO2 purging) or to do a full liquid purge.

One can get anal about the O2 ingress but depending on how long your beers sit in the keg, it can make or break some beers. Cold side practice is very important.
 
After I transfer closed, I bup the keg 3-5 times while the gas is hooked to purge. Prior to the transfer, after the keg is cleaned I leave 1/3 full of starsan and use co2 to push this out and emplty the keg.
Looks like I am leaving them on the co2 too long. Maybe I will try to carb these kegs up for a week and disconnect and let them condition at room temperature.

Looks like you are keeping O2 out everywhere except in the keg you are transferring to.

I think purging with fermentation gas is the easiest method - hook up gas out from your fermenter to liquid in on your keg, then gas out from that to the liquid in on your second keg, then gas out on that to a spunding valve. You can keep pressure really low at first, and then turn it up when there's a few points to go to carbonate.

To purge with your CO2 tank, you need 13-15 purges at 30PSI. Kind of wasteful on an empty keg, not too bad on headspace after dry hopping.

As we've already established, these things aren't causing you noticeable short term problems, but long term stability issues.
 
Hook up fermenter to blow through keg that will contain beer eventually, as per @marc1 suggestion to fully purge a keg with fermentation gas.

1643668472384.png
 
If time for brewing is not a factor instead of double batching and having a keg sitting around at room temp for a month or more just brew a batch at a time. You mentioned that you have cold crashed at some point just not on these so that makes me think you have a refrigerated area big enough to hold 2 fermonsters since you double batch. If you are on a good schedule you can have one carbed and ready before the other keg blows. I like variety to much to drink the same beer over and over. I rarely drink the same beer all night let a lone for months and months. All good advice above, just figured I throw in my 2 cents.
 
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To those recommending/have knowledge on EVAbarrier -- Can oxygen make its way through the red CO2 line?

This is what I'm using
PXL_20220201_151608657.jpg
 
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Prior to the transfer, after the keg is cleaned I leave 1/3 full of starsan and use co2 to push this out and emplty the keg.
That method leaves the keg 1/3 filled with Starsan, and 2/3 filled with air, 21% of that being Oxygen. That translates to 14% (a volume of 3 quarts) in that keg is pure oxygen (!).

One of the better methods of 100% pre-purging that keg, is to fill it all to the way to the brim,* set the lid, and purge all the Starsan (or water) out, you'll get a keg that's 100% filled with CO2.
The essence is, the lid remains on the keg until the next cleaning. You'd fill the keg through the liquid out post with a QD attached to your transfer hose.

* Filling to the brim includes a few small details to also remove the small amount of air left under the lid and gas dome.

Then, a closed transfer from fermenter into the 100% pre-purged keg will prevent your beer being exposed to any, or as little as possible air (O2 being the bandit to avoid).
 
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