william_shakes_beer
Well-Known Member
The events described below happened to me. But they are physically impossible.
I kegged a batch of guiness stout clone. Since the kegs were new to me, i gave them my standard first time cleaning. Removed the beer and gas posts, dropped them into a small container of starsan. Removed the dip tubes, inspected the seals, ran star san through inside and out, reassembled the posts putting keg lube at each point with a rubber seal. Rinsed out the inside of the keg with starsan. Siphoned the beer into the keg, sealed it up, hit it with 12# of co2, set it in the corner until I free up a carbing spot in my Keezer.
A few weeks later, I kick my first keg. Rotate the carbing keg to the serving position, move the guiness keg to the carbing position, put on the 12# gas line. All is good.
A few weeks later, I kick my next keg, time to serve up the Guiness. When I open the tap, nothing comes out. Like there is no keg connected. I verify the beer line runs to the selected tap. Whe I remove the beer line, beer starts dribbling beer out of the keg post. OK, there's a leak in the seal. Pop the beer line back on. Still no beer out of the tap. Pull and depressurize the keg. Pull out the beer post. Some moron forgot to reinstall the poppet spring!!!
Steal a poppet spring from an empty keg. Reinstall, I'm drinkin Guiness.
Heres' what I don't understand. Its pretty obvious that the beer poppet was held in place initially by the keg lube and later by the continuous 12# of pressure. What I don't understand is why the post was completely occluded when I tapped it with the ball lock fitting on the end of the beer line. It should have dribbled out at least a little foam from the flow disruptions caused by the out of position poppet. How could this situation have possibly resulted in "no beer at all"? I tried flowing the tap twice before discovering my error.
I kegged a batch of guiness stout clone. Since the kegs were new to me, i gave them my standard first time cleaning. Removed the beer and gas posts, dropped them into a small container of starsan. Removed the dip tubes, inspected the seals, ran star san through inside and out, reassembled the posts putting keg lube at each point with a rubber seal. Rinsed out the inside of the keg with starsan. Siphoned the beer into the keg, sealed it up, hit it with 12# of co2, set it in the corner until I free up a carbing spot in my Keezer.
A few weeks later, I kick my first keg. Rotate the carbing keg to the serving position, move the guiness keg to the carbing position, put on the 12# gas line. All is good.
A few weeks later, I kick my next keg, time to serve up the Guiness. When I open the tap, nothing comes out. Like there is no keg connected. I verify the beer line runs to the selected tap. Whe I remove the beer line, beer starts dribbling beer out of the keg post. OK, there's a leak in the seal. Pop the beer line back on. Still no beer out of the tap. Pull and depressurize the keg. Pull out the beer post. Some moron forgot to reinstall the poppet spring!!!
Steal a poppet spring from an empty keg. Reinstall, I'm drinkin Guiness.
Heres' what I don't understand. Its pretty obvious that the beer poppet was held in place initially by the keg lube and later by the continuous 12# of pressure. What I don't understand is why the post was completely occluded when I tapped it with the ball lock fitting on the end of the beer line. It should have dribbled out at least a little foam from the flow disruptions caused by the out of position poppet. How could this situation have possibly resulted in "no beer at all"? I tried flowing the tap twice before discovering my error.