My tip for new keggers is this...eliminate one of the variables, namely the carbonation of the keg. Either slow carb at serving pressure for a week, or alternatively, do a slow force carb....
set the gas on at serving pressure, lay the (serving temp) keg on the floor, sit on a chair in front of it with a good book, and roll the bugger back and forth with your foot for 20 minutes. Then put it back in the fridge, give it a few minutes to settle down, attach the tap, and away you go. At this point, it will be
slightly under carbed, but definately drinkable. Better under than over. 24 hours on the gas and the carb will be perfect. It's
impossible to over carbonate this way....and you
know what the carbonation level is after 24 hours on, without any guess work at all. If you have any further pouring problems after that, you know that carbonation level isn't one of the variables, and you can hunt down the problem (which is usually either line length, or warm tap).
If you carb this way,
make sure you have a non return on the line.......(but this applies for any force carb method)
h34r:
The serving pressure should be constant, too...don't fiddle with it. Line length should be adjusted to suit the serving pressure, not the other way. Pressure depends on the carb level required, and the serving temperature. See crozdogs chart in the link from earlier.
edit, OT...
Oh, if you want help to vent the keg just ask butters, he'll vent it 1 glass at a time ph34r.gif
I can do it in record time, too. ^_^