I've got quite a specific question which applies to trying to serve from a room temperature keg through a chilling machine. Common practice in UK for events, small restaurants and (less so) people with very small flats in London.
Getting carbonation right for a room temperature keg is an interesting problem, because 'room temperature' changes with the seasons and times of day, while all the common practice online assumes you have kegs in a fridge at a constant temperature. The result: over time the beer equalises carbonation at the lowest temperature the beer reaches, and when the temperature increases the pressure in the keg rises above the regulator's set pressure (carbonation of course remaining constant, which is why the pressure rises as temp rises in a sealed system). When you serve when the keg is above its minimum temperature, the regulator won't give more CO2 until the pressure reaches a value lower than the level required to hold the CO2 in the beer, which means foaming is an ever-present issue (these machines are notorious for it). You can turn up the pressure to counteract this, but then you end up creeping up over time until the beer is overcarbonated.
I'm looking to solve this by careful manual control, but can't find the regulator type that I need and am wondering if it even exists. Maybe someone on the forum knows? I need a regulator that shows the set pressure separately from the current pressure. All the beer type regulators I have seen elide these two, showing only the current pressure (which will always be the set pressure in normal circumstances, but not in mine). Maybe this calls for a digital regulator (do these exist/are they affordable for homebrewers)?
The theory is if I can know accurately a) the current pressure in the keg and b) the pressure the regulator is current set to maintain, then I can compare the two and adjust the regulator to maintain the current keg pressure while serving, then turn off the gas supply when not in use, so I don't end up with that new higher pressure over-carbonating the beer when it cools down at night.
Many thanks for any insights!
Getting carbonation right for a room temperature keg is an interesting problem, because 'room temperature' changes with the seasons and times of day, while all the common practice online assumes you have kegs in a fridge at a constant temperature. The result: over time the beer equalises carbonation at the lowest temperature the beer reaches, and when the temperature increases the pressure in the keg rises above the regulator's set pressure (carbonation of course remaining constant, which is why the pressure rises as temp rises in a sealed system). When you serve when the keg is above its minimum temperature, the regulator won't give more CO2 until the pressure reaches a value lower than the level required to hold the CO2 in the beer, which means foaming is an ever-present issue (these machines are notorious for it). You can turn up the pressure to counteract this, but then you end up creeping up over time until the beer is overcarbonated.
I'm looking to solve this by careful manual control, but can't find the regulator type that I need and am wondering if it even exists. Maybe someone on the forum knows? I need a regulator that shows the set pressure separately from the current pressure. All the beer type regulators I have seen elide these two, showing only the current pressure (which will always be the set pressure in normal circumstances, but not in mine). Maybe this calls for a digital regulator (do these exist/are they affordable for homebrewers)?
The theory is if I can know accurately a) the current pressure in the keg and b) the pressure the regulator is current set to maintain, then I can compare the two and adjust the regulator to maintain the current keg pressure while serving, then turn off the gas supply when not in use, so I don't end up with that new higher pressure over-carbonating the beer when it cools down at night.
Many thanks for any insights!