I am force carbonating two cornys with a single regulator and a tee barbed connector. I was told to set the PSI to 40 for 2 days. Anyone have a set of force carbonating instructions for dummies ?
When I force carbonate I usually set my regulator at 30 psi and leave it for 2 days, then lower it to 12 psi for another two to three days. This usually gives me about 2.5 volumes. All of this is done about 40 F.
My kegerator is at 37degrees. My LHB guy said that splitting the lines with a tee required me to set the pressure to double. I will keep reading stuff I find on the web as well. Thanks Brian
I actually have my single regulator going to 5 taps. The only problem I have ever had is a connection has come loose and drained my tank. I keep my regulator at 12 psi and it feeds all 5 kegs.
Yep I agree with Brian as Im running tandem regulators. 1 for 3 kegs with beer and 1 for a sparkling wine. I disconnect the hose to the sparkling to force carb each new keg at 30 for 2 days and then connect it to the beer reg which is always set at 10psi. The reg. fpor the sparkling typically has to stay at around 16psi.
Are you using a 3' hose? if so this is the problem and I hate when brew shops sell this to people without telling them its going to pour foam like a SOB! Get yourself 8-10' and I bet you get a much better pour!
and what psi are you running? I find 8' @3/16 to be the min.this is why you always see a coil inside everyone's fridge as shorter lengths just give out foam due to no back pressure. kind of like a big engine with open headers!
Here are the links to a couple of sites that are pretty useful, particularly the second one. Check them out. I personally just use my brewing software to tell me what psi to set.
I am surprised you were told to double the psi if you are branching your line. I normally just set my psi to the prescribed pressure and let it set a couple weeks to carbonate. I have hooked a keg up to 30-40 psi and gently rocked the keg to rapidly force carb but that is pretty easy way to over carb. I normally take the patient way.
Me too. It doesn't matter if you're pressurizing one keg or two, 10 psi is 10 psi.
I just ran into the issue of too short of beer line myself. I told the local LHBS owner that I wanted 20' of standard homebrew size beverage line. He gave me 1/4" ID line. I thought nothing of it and put 6' of it on a keg dispensing at about 12 psi. I got nothing but foam. Turns out 1/4" is really only good for longer draw set ups and has a flow resistance of around 0.65 psi/foot. 3/16" ID line has around 2.2 psi/foot resistance and is what I meant to get. Now I have to turn the pressure down to about 3psi to serve the beer without a ton of foam. Looks like another trip to the LHBS is in order.
If it's only been a couple days at 40 psi then you should be fine. Does it taste overcarbonated? If it is overcarbed, you can vent the pressure relief valve a couple times a day to lower the carbonation level.
I only have one corny with a PRV on top. the others all have the emergency PRV that only goes off when the pressure exceeds the predetermined pressure. Fortunately I am using it on one of them now. I released the pressure in the corny and turned the working pressure to 10 psi. Still getting a lot of foam, but not unbearable.
Trav,
as far as overcarbonated, I'm not sure I'd know as I am a newbie at this. But I think the taste of the beer is pretty darn good. Time to pour another one