i bought 4 new kegs recently and two are working brilliantly. The other two I’m finding I’m getting co2 break out in the lines immediately after pouring and foam at tap. Initially I thought I had an overcarbed beer, but I set and forget so I was surprised. However I’ve ran plain tap (uncarbonated) water through them and I’m still getting co2 breakout in the lines. Big ugly bubbles and tap farts. This is regardless of what disconnects I’m using in my setup and with good kegs everything works perfectly. I transferred the suspect beer to a good keg and it’s fine, definitely not overcarbed.
I’ve tried replacing and lubing the diptube o rings, doubling the o rings up and adjusting the post torque. but I’m also thinking maybe it’s a production fault potentially on the grooves of the dip tubes, maybe they’re too steep and keeping the o ring from sealing against the dip properly? I’m sure co2 solution is entering the beer line from the headspace in the keg. I’ve got no liquid leaks and the kegs definitely hold pressure.
A bloke on a Facebook brewing group is having the same drama as me so I know I’m not the only one.
Anyone had a similar drama and resolved it? I’ll utilise the warranty these things came with if need be, but if there’s a simple fix, I’m all ears.
Cheers Timbo
I’ve tried replacing and lubing the diptube o rings, doubling the o rings up and adjusting the post torque. but I’m also thinking maybe it’s a production fault potentially on the grooves of the dip tubes, maybe they’re too steep and keeping the o ring from sealing against the dip properly? I’m sure co2 solution is entering the beer line from the headspace in the keg. I’ve got no liquid leaks and the kegs definitely hold pressure.
A bloke on a Facebook brewing group is having the same drama as me so I know I’m not the only one.
Anyone had a similar drama and resolved it? I’ll utilise the warranty these things came with if need be, but if there’s a simple fix, I’m all ears.
Cheers Timbo