I would agree with Keith on that link to get an overview of the basic concepts, and where you will see why as Ivan states, there are indeed minimum requirements for line length. Then you can use this handy dandy free tool from McDantim to quickly do the math required. Putting this on your phone can come in handy when in the field (or your home bar!). https://mcdantim.com/tools/calculator . On home systems, I'd would usually cut the line an extra foot longer than the calcs, since you can always trim it down (I've never had to). You'll need to have a line length that adds enough restriction to equal the PSI number. Restriction charts are all over the interwebs.
We haven't really heard about the source of the beer or carb level, but throw a good thermometer on top of your keg and leave it for an 30 min- 1hr. without opening the door, then read that temp. If you are buying commercial US brewery kegs, the carb level will generally be between 2.50-2.65, so with temp and carb level, you can manipulate the value in the calculator (or look at a chart) to reach that line length. Typically in a fridge system, you'll want 3/16" ID line (choker line), so you won't need so much length as 1/4", but 1/4 is often the smallest diameter at your local homebrew store. If you foresee occasionally getting a higher carb Belgian beer or German hefe, either go a little longer, or (preferably) have separate piece of hose for that. Choker has restriction of ~3 PSI/ft. The calcs may tell you ~5' is the length you need, but I've always still had some foaming at this length on a standard faucet with no restrictor. Ideally you just splurge for a faucet that does and your draught beer will get a lot simpler. Cut a 5' length of choker and put whatever on you want, and adjust the restrictor as necessary.
The quick and dirty answer with easy numbers is: I have always found 38F (A temp I prefer), 6-7 ft. of 3/16" vinyl line, and 12 psi to work great. If you like your beer colder, you'll be around 10-11 psi.
Cheers
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Travis Hixon
Half Acre Beer Co.
Chicago IL
travis.hixon@halfacrebeer.com(615) 944-7475
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Original Message:
Sent: 06-20-2023 18:21
From: Keith Lemcke
Subject: Excessive Foam
Draught beer requires appropriate calculations in order to have manageable foam production and carbonation. Go to the website at https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/how-to-brew/a-balancing-act-how-to-balance-your-home-draft-system/ which will go through the basics of how to calculate how much hose is needed between the keg and faucet on a direct draw system (kegerator) based on your specific serving parameters. The summary of the article does a good job of telling you the basics of an appropriately designed system.
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Keith Lemcke
Marketing Director
Siebel Institute of Technology
Chicago IL
(312) 255-0705
Original Message:
Sent: 06-16-2023 18:01
From: Timothy Sackrider
Subject: Excessive Foam
I have a keg system I converted from an old refrigerator. Every pour is about 90% foam. I've tried a wide range of co2 pressure from 5, all the way to 15 lbs. Can you suggest what I might be doing wrong?