phildo79
Member
It can be tricky at first. I had all sorts of mishaps. But stick with it, you will be a keg master in no time. Couple of pointers though, so you don't have beer on the ceiling... or other headaches.
1. Reduce psi slowly when still attached to the keg. I've had beer on the ceiling and a reg filled with beer. Best to avoid both.
2. If attached to keg or not, always reduce below the desired psi and then increase to the desired psi. If you reduce down and walk away, it will continue to vent. You need to reapply pressure.
3. Whilst gas and liquid posts look almost alike, they are not and the disconnects are coloured differently for a reason. You can push a gas disconnect on a liquid post quite easily (if you think your dip tube is clogged, for example). Getting it off is not so simple. But it will come off with brute force.
1. Reduce psi slowly when still attached to the keg. I've had beer on the ceiling and a reg filled with beer. Best to avoid both.
2. If attached to keg or not, always reduce below the desired psi and then increase to the desired psi. If you reduce down and walk away, it will continue to vent. You need to reapply pressure.
3. Whilst gas and liquid posts look almost alike, they are not and the disconnects are coloured differently for a reason. You can push a gas disconnect on a liquid post quite easily (if you think your dip tube is clogged, for example). Getting it off is not so simple. But it will come off with brute force.