Shapebrewer
Member
Hi all,
New to this forum. Just started home brewing since one month. Did quite a lot of research from this forum and YT. Special thanks to theapartmentbrewer and related channels from YT. I did my own kegerator setup, using a Grainfather G30 and Mangrovejack's fermenter. All is going well. However, since yesterday I encountered one problem. Every pour of a pint is getting too foamy. Just realised the CO2 tank is out of CO2. Does this cause extra foaming issues? Initially thought it was due to over-carbonation of the keg but nothing worked and realised the CO2 tank is empty. Had to weigh it because the main clock of the regulator is broken - accidentally it fell last week. Now I have purged all the CO2 out from the keg thinking about over-carbonation but realised the CO2 tank is out. The CO2 local store opens only after two days. What do you suggest in this situation? I have been experimenting and all is going well except for these little challenges but look forward to staying connected with the community. Doing these works in Finland and Nepal. Cheers all.
New to this forum. Just started home brewing since one month. Did quite a lot of research from this forum and YT. Special thanks to theapartmentbrewer and related channels from YT. I did my own kegerator setup, using a Grainfather G30 and Mangrovejack's fermenter. All is going well. However, since yesterday I encountered one problem. Every pour of a pint is getting too foamy. Just realised the CO2 tank is out of CO2. Does this cause extra foaming issues? Initially thought it was due to over-carbonation of the keg but nothing worked and realised the CO2 tank is empty. Had to weigh it because the main clock of the regulator is broken - accidentally it fell last week. Now I have purged all the CO2 out from the keg thinking about over-carbonation but realised the CO2 tank is out. The CO2 local store opens only after two days. What do you suggest in this situation? I have been experimenting and all is going well except for these little challenges but look forward to staying connected with the community. Doing these works in Finland and Nepal. Cheers all.