I remember many lost brain cells ago when i started brewing, i had nothing but trouble getting consistent carb in by bottled beers.
There was bugger all in the way of on line help and i was recording every little datail of my beers progress. I had a suspician that the FG of the beer had more of an effect on carb, than ferment temp as is used in a lot of priming calculators. I plotted all my beers FG's and bulk priming amounts on some grid paper and marked over, under and properly carbed beers.
This gave me a rough line that i made through the middle, and a bit of maths gave me an X factor to calculate the priming amount depending on the beers FG.
It worked perfectly and all my beers were perfectly carbed for years to come!
I will note that i have always used Dextrose, and the figures were done to give a good carbonation after about a month in the bottle. I was not a fan of using a lot of priming sugar to have it carbed in a week. This usually resulted in over carb, big bubbles, metallic tang from CO2 and poor head retention. I preferd a slower carbonation with smaller bubbles and a fine head.
I gave the spread sheet i will attach to a mate starting brewing to bulk prime a FWK he made, and it worked out perfect. After 14 days it was still a bit flat and he rang me saying..... what do i do..... its still half flat. I said " leave it for a week to 10 days and try it again. A week later it was perfect.
For a 22 liter batch of beer finnishing around 1.008, i would prime with 150g of dextrose for a rate of 6.82 grams per liter.
You used 80g in 15 liters which works out at 5.33 grams per liter
about 22% less.
I would say leave it for another couple weeks and if its still a bit lacking, that is all you will get.
next time use the g/L rate on the document i have attached to work out how much to use and give it a try.
I used to make sure i bottled the beer at room tamp also. I found if i bulk primed and bottled cold, i got inconsistant results, usually over carbonation, because the beer holds some CO2 in solution from fermentation while its cold, especially lagers that have putted away slowly in CC.
cheers
View attachment PRIMING CHART 1.xls