I don't want to hijack this thread at all, but I'm having all sorts of problems too with foamy pour. I have a 2 litre jug and I fill it with foam, there's about 5mm of clear beer on the bottom. Oscar, have you looked in your beer lines inside the fridge?
When I look, there is pretty much a constant stream of bubbles coming out of the liquid connector into the beer line. The beer is only very lightly carbonated, and I don't shake to carbonate- I put it on pressure cold for a few days like oscar. In my case there is no temperature differential (I don't think) as the keg and lines are all inside the fridge. I've recently replaced all the seals in my kegs, maybe the disconnect is the problem? But they're only about a year old.
It has pretty much happened with my last 3 or 4 kegs but after pouring maybe 10L of the keg it starts to settle down... which is way too long. Any suggestions?
ok what your decribing is exactly the problem i had when i first kegged same method of carbing, same foam all through lines, everything. after massive amounts of reading and throwing myself around i came upon this conclusion
my beer was overcarbed, yes thats right i hear you saying 'but it dosnt taste overcarbed' but i found out that when you get fairly overcarbed it can actually taste flat (dont ask me why as i have no idea)
whats happening is youve got so much carbonation that when youve turned the gas down to serving pressure, as beer is leaving the keg there is not enough pressure to keep the C02 in suspention and its instantly unabsorbing and creating a line full of foam
what i did was turn off the gas and burp the keg (release pressure through the pressure release valve) every so often for about 24 hours i then forced carbed using the method ill explain in a second(because i was impatiant) but you could also slow carb back up to serving pressure which will force the c02 back into suspension.
after i did this it was pouring fine.
from then on ive used 1 of 2 methods
1.LEAVE IT ALONE (slow carb) this is the best method set your pressure to serving and leave it for like a week its slower i know but you will get a perfect gassing from this, you will never overcarb and IMHO the carbonation is less 'harsh' on the pallet
2. if you absolutely must drink it right now use the ross method turn it up to around 300 kpa and turn the keg on its side with the gas post closest to the floor then rock it back and forth like a nutter for about 40 secs, turn the gass off at the bottle, now keep rocking it and watch the pressure dial it will fall fairly quickly and you want it to settle around 140 kpa it probably wont off 40 secs of rocking (easier to add carb then take it away) but then do it again for another 5 secs and repeat in 5 sec intervals untill it settles around 140 and you have a perfect gassing.
i hope this helps you as it did me and stoped my keg from entering orbit
happy kegging
(typed but not read as im very drunk right now :lol: )