Drackean
Active Member
Hey guys,
First time poster, long time reader from Quebec, Canada. You guys greatly helped me over the years to brew some pretty decent beer and to really get hooked on the hobby. I rarely seen a community that nice and knowlegable, and I mean it. Thank you all !
What drives me to write this first post is a kegging issue I just can't understand. Since I'm fairly new to kegging, I like to turn off the main valve of my cylinder when not using my system to prevent any loss due to an eventual leak (I lost one already !). Say my regulator is calibrated at 10 PSI before being turned off. When I turn it back on a few days later, it will usually suddenly rush to 15-20 PSI, as if the regulator had been cranked up while the gas was off.
I keep tweaking my dial to fix this and I just don't understand why it happens. My beer is carbonated perfectly, at least I feel so.
I hope you guys can figure it out, as usual
First time poster, long time reader from Quebec, Canada. You guys greatly helped me over the years to brew some pretty decent beer and to really get hooked on the hobby. I rarely seen a community that nice and knowlegable, and I mean it. Thank you all !
What drives me to write this first post is a kegging issue I just can't understand. Since I'm fairly new to kegging, I like to turn off the main valve of my cylinder when not using my system to prevent any loss due to an eventual leak (I lost one already !). Say my regulator is calibrated at 10 PSI before being turned off. When I turn it back on a few days later, it will usually suddenly rush to 15-20 PSI, as if the regulator had been cranked up while the gas was off.
I keep tweaking my dial to fix this and I just don't understand why it happens. My beer is carbonated perfectly, at least I feel so.
I hope you guys can figure it out, as usual