Did I read some where that the regulator reads different when it's colder? Or was it that it had to sit in the cold for a time before it was accurate?
Basically I have the corny, the CO2 everything at ~34F.
yinzer wrote:Did I read some where that the regulator reads different when it's colder?

siwelwerd wrote:yinzer wrote:Did I read some where that the regulator reads different when it's colder?
Yes. It will read lower if it's colder.
yinzer wrote:Thanks, so if it's reading lower then I run the risk of over carbonating. Any idea how much it will be off at 32-34F?

siwelwerd wrote:yinzer wrote:Thanks, so if it's reading lower then I run the risk of over carbonating. Any idea how much it will be off at 32-34F?
No, the output pressure is okay. What reads low is the gauge telling you the pressure in the CO2 tank. All this means is it will be a little harder for you to predict when you will run out.

11amas wrote:Yeah, I hear this question all of the time: "don't I need to turn up gas when I put my CO2 tank in the kegerator?" Lol, no! You are putting more CO2 into the keg when the PSI is set and you put cold gas through it but...here is the key...your keg temp is constant so when the denser CO2 at given pressure goes into your beer you will form an balance with the gas in the keg and the headspace pushing back at the same pressure as your regulator is set to. When the beer and keg are warm, yes, you need more PSI for a specific "volumes of gas" in solution. In the case where the keg has not changed, as the first reply states, only the tank pressure changes.

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