Hi!
First of all, my apologies if this has been asked before. Iôve been looking for this issue in the forum and found nothing.
Thing is we have a nice Angram hand pump installed in a pub in NW Spain. Casks are not so usual here (not at all...), so we had only tapped a couple of Fullerôs that we got in special events. Also some local spanish micro-breweries can provide us cask ale.
So we decided to adapt the hand pump to turn it into a regular beer tap, so we can use pressurized kegs. We already have a check valve/ demand valve installed, and it seems to work properly, but the problem is that we get too much froth, so much we have to wait for a while for the foam to go down and then refill the glass. When we try to serve the same beer via a regular beer tap, we get no foam problems, so we guess this is not a beer overcarbonation problem but an installation one.
This is the check valve we use:
http://www.ewlonline.co.uk/mk2-check-valve-3-8-jg-in-1-2-stem-c-w-brk
The check valve is installed quite close to the pump, less than 10 inches. Keg pressure is set to the minimum (around 0,3 bar, this is around 5 psi), and the whole beer line, from coupler to pump, via beer cooler, is 3/8" diameter (except the valve outlet and pump inlet, where we use John Guest adaptors)
Any tip on how we can get less froth? We will aprreciate any help, since we have little experience dealing with hand pumps, and its hard to find someone in Spain who does.
Cheers,
David
First of all, my apologies if this has been asked before. Iôve been looking for this issue in the forum and found nothing.
Thing is we have a nice Angram hand pump installed in a pub in NW Spain. Casks are not so usual here (not at all...), so we had only tapped a couple of Fullerôs that we got in special events. Also some local spanish micro-breweries can provide us cask ale.
So we decided to adapt the hand pump to turn it into a regular beer tap, so we can use pressurized kegs. We already have a check valve/ demand valve installed, and it seems to work properly, but the problem is that we get too much froth, so much we have to wait for a while for the foam to go down and then refill the glass. When we try to serve the same beer via a regular beer tap, we get no foam problems, so we guess this is not a beer overcarbonation problem but an installation one.
This is the check valve we use:
http://www.ewlonline.co.uk/mk2-check-valve-3-8-jg-in-1-2-stem-c-w-brk
The check valve is installed quite close to the pump, less than 10 inches. Keg pressure is set to the minimum (around 0,3 bar, this is around 5 psi), and the whole beer line, from coupler to pump, via beer cooler, is 3/8" diameter (except the valve outlet and pump inlet, where we use John Guest adaptors)
Any tip on how we can get less froth? We will aprreciate any help, since we have little experience dealing with hand pumps, and its hard to find someone in Spain who does.
Cheers,
David