Thu Mar 05, 2009 8:02 pm
Yeah, Balto and Quin are onto something. If you have a check valve in your system - it should prevent pressure from the keg going back into your regulator. But they are not perfect, especially when the differential on each side of it is not that big (one or two PSI). The gas will tend to equalize over the course of a couple of hours. They attempt to overcome this in the design, by using a spring.
In any case, I think it's always best to bleed off the extra pressure at the keg and come up to your desired pressure. Go slow. I have found that the needle tends to move exponentially slower as it approaches the maximum that you have set. If you jamb it right up to 12, you might have actually set it for something higher. On the flip side, it is entirely possible to think you are dialing it "down to 12", and overshoot. When everything equalizes - you will find yourself down at 8...
Mylo
"Life is too short to bottle homebrew." - Me
"HEINEKEN? Fuck that shit! Pabst Blue Ribbon!!!" - Dennis Hopper, in Blue Velvet