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+1 for BLC. It will make lines that serve kegs of stout look brand new. A bottle of it will last a long time depending on how often you feel the need to clean your lines.
In terms of the process, I have 4 taps and I daisy chain them together using 3/4 silicone hose and ball lock jumpers. Here's the ball lock jumpers that will join two (or more) liquid lines together. Ball Lock Keg (free flowing) QD Jumper Post for Cleaning
Out of the bucket (I use a 1 gallon plastic pitcher with a bottling bucket spigot) I connect to my brew pump. Out of the brew pump I connect to tap1 using the 3/4 ID silicone hose. It fits snugly over the tip of the tap. No disassembly required. Line1 and Line2 beer lines connect using the aforementioned ball lock jumper. Tap2 and Tap3 connect using a short piece of 3/4 silicone hose. Line3 and Line4 connect using another ball lock jumper, and Tap 4 has another silicone hose that returns to the plastic pitcher or another dump pitcher depending on if I'm recirculating or flushing.
Once all the open taps and lines are daisy changed together, I'll flush all of the lines with warm water to remove beer. I'll then add BLC to the pitcher mixed with the correct amount of warm water. I'll let this run for a minute or two then kill the pump and let it soak for 3 to 4 minutes. Repeat this 3x or until the lines look clean. If the lines are really dirty, I'll let the BLC recirculate a bit longer. During the cycles when the pump is off, I'll open and close each tap several times to ensure all moving parts are in contact with the BLC solution.
After the lines are clean, I'll dump the BLC mixture and replace it with clean warm water and flush a full gallon through all taps and lines. Remove all jumpers and reconnect lines to kegs and flush with a cup or two of beer. Done.
It's simple and effective, but it does take some time to setup and tear down. As a result, I clean my lines 2 or 3 times a year. I recently saw this thing and I'm going to add it to my wish list. I've seen others do something similar with a garden sprayer, but this device looks even simpler to use, which may increase the number of times per year I clean each line individually vs. the daisy chain method.
As for foam, I used to run long coiled lines, but after switching over to the small diameter Eva barrier, I've had zero foam issues and use far shorter lines that are much more flexible that the other lines I was using. Worth the investment, IMO.
~HopSing. |
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