drtablet
Active Member
Hello,
I've been using a CPBF for a few weeks.
I wanted to ask people what pressure and temperature they bottle at.
I bottle direct from the fridge at 2C and 13PSI which is my serving pressure.
I think ideally if I dropped the PSI to 5 then I'd get less of a squirt mess when I popped the bottle off once its filled. Right now the head space has froth which is great for it pushed out any O2 from the headspace (even thought I've already displaced O2 with CO2 before I started.
BUT reducing my PSI from serving pressure of 13 down to 5 would mean that my beer starts to lose carbonation as I'm bottling.
If I was bottling a 19 or 50l keg then I imagine having the PSI at 5 instead of the serving pressure of 13 (2C) would cause decarbination. Or is this over doing it, would having a 13PSI carbonated beer at 5PI for 60-90mins really have a noticeably effect?
So what do people do with the best effects?
I've been using a CPBF for a few weeks.
I wanted to ask people what pressure and temperature they bottle at.
I bottle direct from the fridge at 2C and 13PSI which is my serving pressure.
I think ideally if I dropped the PSI to 5 then I'd get less of a squirt mess when I popped the bottle off once its filled. Right now the head space has froth which is great for it pushed out any O2 from the headspace (even thought I've already displaced O2 with CO2 before I started.
BUT reducing my PSI from serving pressure of 13 down to 5 would mean that my beer starts to lose carbonation as I'm bottling.
If I was bottling a 19 or 50l keg then I imagine having the PSI at 5 instead of the serving pressure of 13 (2C) would cause decarbination. Or is this over doing it, would having a 13PSI carbonated beer at 5PI for 60-90mins really have a noticeably effect?
So what do people do with the best effects?