Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Canning Discussion For Nano and Brewpubs- 2019/2020

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Originally posted by AmbrosiaOrchard View Post
    That is unfortunate, how long ago was that?
    Pretty much all this summer. I eventually got it 90% figured out but still having major foaming issues on mine.

    Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Crosley View Post
      Pretty much all this summer. I eventually got it 90% figured out but still having major foaming issues on mine.

      Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk
      I have foaming on one product that has a high level of carbonation, but only when I try to fill cans from kegs. I am able to drop the temp to 35F from the uni-tank, but our walk in doesn't get cold enough. This is on Mead by the way.

      Comment


      • #18
        Pick your best recipe and get a bigger brewery to can it for you? The minimum I have heard of in NM is 10 bbl?

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by Crosley View Post
          I'm glad your experience was good with those guys.

          I've had the opposite of luck. Called 4 weeks in a row and the only response I got was "I don't know why it's doing that" Their solution was to give a contact for another brewery that has had luck with their product to call them. Overall I'm not 100% satisfied with that level of customer service.

          Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk
          XpressFill endeavors to provide the best technical support possible to its customers. When dealing with issues that are not typical with our equipment, we often find that existing customers may be better able to relate to and identify specific in-field conditions that we may not be aware of. We will continue to work with any customer who is not 100% satisfied with our equipment.

          Comment


          • #20
            Originally posted by xpressfill View Post
            XpressFill endeavors to provide the best technical support possible to its customers. When dealing with issues that are not typical with our equipment, we often find that existing customers may be better able to relate to and identify specific in-field conditions that we may not be aware of. We will continue to work with any customer who is not 100% satisfied with our equipment.
            Don't want to ruffle too many feathers, however this is a cop-out. If you're going to build, market, and sell equipment like this, you better damn well know everything there is to know about the dynamics of filling. There are a few variables that come into play with filling, you should know them all and their effect, and you should also know them all enough so that you can have them take measurements and pictures to give you all the details so that you can figure out what is happening. You should also be cataloging every issue, its solution, as well as getting feedback from the units in use so that you can find out "best practices" for your equipment.

            If I had purchased from you and your response to service request was we don't know, ask someone else who uses it, I'd tell you to come pick your shit up and send back my money. You sell a product, stand by it and support it.

            End of rant

            Comment


            • #21
              So I just received my xpressfill xf2200 for open can filling. I ran a test on a beer we had in the brite tank, changing variables (line length and head pressure) until I minimized foaming and got the cans to the right fill level based on weight of can.

              The trick with this piece of equipment is balancing your system best you can while keeping the beer as cold as possible.

              Coming from the bottom of a 14bbl brite tank, I needed about 30 ft of 5/16" vinyl tubing and a head pressure of 5-6 PSI. A lower head pressure will cause the beer to "break out" and bubble in the tubing. Higher head pressure caused the beer to move just a little to fast and foam more in the can. Once i established that 5-6 PSI was the pressure needed to avoid "break out", i tested different lengths of tubing, adding 10ft at a time with splicers. 30ft seemed to do it. Beer was about 34F. Gonna try to get it colder when we run our first canning run. Needed to run about six cans to cool down the system and get consistently full cans.

              I will also say, I felt that the 3 seconds of CO2 purge time wasn't sufficient. I gave Xpressfill a call and got to speak to a person right away. He helped me adjust the CO2 purge time (it was super easy) and was very friendly and helpful when I was discussing the equipment with him.

              Hope this helps anyone who is trying to dial in this piece of equipment.

              Cheers,
              Bill

              Comment


              • #22
                I am surprised someone does not make a simple robot for under $10k that is able to reliably can 1 can a minute without issues, 20 cases in an 8 hour shift... 20 years ago, kids were having robots stack blocks to spell words... surely we have advanced some since then...

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by CDC View Post
                  I am surprised someone does not make a simple robot for under $10k that is able to reliably can 1 can a minute without issues, 20 cases in an 8 hour shift... 20 years ago, kids were having robots stack blocks to spell words... surely we have advanced some since then...
                  I agree that we should have advanced a bit more by how but 1 can a minute???? Selling for $32 a six pack???

                  Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Chestnut_Bill View Post
                    So I just received my xpressfill xf2200 for open can filling. I ran a test on a beer we had in the brite tank, changing variables (line length and head pressure) until I minimized foaming and got the cans to the right fill level based on weight of can.

                    The trick with this piece of equipment is balancing your system best you can while keeping the beer as cold as possible.

                    Coming from the bottom of a 14bbl brite tank, I needed about 30 ft of 5/16" vinyl tubing and a head pressure of 5-6 PSI. A lower head pressure will cause the beer to "break out" and bubble in the tubing. Higher head pressure caused the beer to move just a little to fast and foam more in the can. Once i established that 5-6 PSI was the pressure needed to avoid "break out", i tested different lengths of tubing, adding 10ft at a time with splicers. 30ft seemed to do it. Beer was about 34F. Gonna try to get it colder when we run our first canning run. Needed to run about six cans to cool down the system and get consistently full cans.

                    I will also say, I felt that the 3 seconds of CO2 purge time wasn't sufficient. I gave Xpressfill a call and got to speak to a person right away. He helped me adjust the CO2 purge time (it was super easy) and was very friendly and helpful when I was discussing the equipment with him.

                    Hope this helps anyone who is trying to dial in this piece of equipment.

                    Cheers,
                    Bill
                    Very good info Bill! Thank you for sharing. Different elevations will change the foaming dynamic, so your numbers might not work for everyone but they will get people into the ballpark. For canning from kegs, I'm going to put my kegs in a bucket with ice and rock salt to try and keep it as close to 30 as possible to help keep breakout down as well and keep my volumes of CO2 up. I always found when I used a beer gun to bottle with in my garage that chilling bottles first by putting ice in the sanitizer sink kept foaming at a reasonable level. Seems like going into a cold can wouldn't be a bad idea either.

                    Cheers!

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Chestnut_Bill View Post
                      So I just received my xpressfill xf2200 for open can filling. I ran a test on a beer we had in the brite tank, changing variables (line length and head pressure) until I minimized foaming and got the cans to the right fill level based on weight of can.

                      The trick with this piece of equipment is balancing your system best you can while keeping the beer as cold as possible.

                      Coming from the bottom of a 14bbl brite tank, I needed about 30 ft of 5/16" vinyl tubing and a head pressure of 5-6 PSI. A lower head pressure will cause the beer to "break out" and bubble in the tubing. Higher head pressure caused the beer to move just a little to fast and foam more in the can. Once i established that 5-6 PSI was the pressure needed to avoid "break out", i tested different lengths of tubing, adding 10ft at a time with splicers. 30ft seemed to do it. Beer was about 34F. Gonna try to get it colder when we run our first canning run. Needed to run about six cans to cool down the system and get consistently full cans.

                      I will also say, I felt that the 3 seconds of CO2 purge time wasn't sufficient. I gave Xpressfill a call and got to speak to a person right away. He helped me adjust the CO2 purge time (it was super easy) and was very friendly and helpful when I was discussing the equipment with him.

                      Hope this helps anyone who is trying to dial in this piece of equipment.

                      Cheers,
                      Bill
                      Bill,
                      Thanks so much for all of the help in this. Your system sounds pretty spot on to ours now that we've got it dialed in.

                      We are finally able to crank through beers straight out of the brite. My tank sits between 31 and 34. I'm running 35ft of 1/4" line. My head pressure is at 10. Everything is working out just perfect, until this crisis hit and we need to sell more to go beer than we expected.

                      We have been selling through all our cans so we are needing to can from kegs. This has been a disaster so far. We've tried it two ways: move the keg into the brewery and run the tubing through ice or keep the keg in the cooler 10ft away. Weve had 1 success story but 10 failures.

                      This seems to be the weirdest thing to me and it's making my brain hurt. We hook it up and slowly increase the pressure until we get rid of the breakout in the line (this is normally 13 in this instance). If we just let the canner run we get clear beer coming out but then quick spurts of foamy beer. This will just keep happening and happening forever. I cannot figure out the difference in brite vs keg and I cannot figure out where this intermittent foaming is coming from.


                      Please please please if anyone has any suggestions I'm open to anything!!!!!

                      Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Push all your kegs back into the bright under pressure?
                        Let it sit for a day and try again?
                        Stupid I know, but what else to do with a bunch of kegs?

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Others are probably more knowledgeable on and can explain exactly how to do this, but my suggestion would be to adjust lengths of line to see if that helps. The restriction of the line is what controls the flow and foaming of the beer. you can calculate, based on formulas for balancing a draft system, length of line (depending on type and dia).

                          Im a little disheartened to hear this, as we were going to start canning from kegs just so we dont have to sit on them. If I figure anything out that'd be helpful, I'll be sure to post back here.

                          BTW, on monday and tuesday this week, given about 9 hours worth of work, we canned 1248 cans of beer with this canner. 2.3 cans per minute. Not spectacular, but you know what, we have a bunch of canned beer right now. Which in this day and age, is keeping us afloat.

                          Good luck yall.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Originally posted by Chestnut_Bill View Post
                            Others are probably more knowledgeable on and can explain exactly how to do this, but my suggestion would be to adjust lengths of line to see if that helps. The restriction of the line is what controls the flow and foaming of the beer. you can calculate, based on formulas for balancing a draft system, length of line (depending on type and dia).

                            Im a little disheartened to hear this, as we were going to start canning from kegs just so we dont have to sit on them. If I figure anything out that'd be helpful, I'll be sure to post back here.

                            BTW, on monday and tuesday this week, given about 9 hours worth of work, we canned 1248 cans of beer with this canner. 2.3 cans per minute. Not spectacular, but you know what, we have a bunch of canned beer right now. Which in this day and age, is keeping us afloat.

                            Good luck yall.
                            Thanks Bill. I've been thinking about having a spliced section I can add for when we try to can off of kegs.

                            Now that I've gotten some time on the filler it's definitely not super fast but we can crank pretty well. Seems like when we are moving good we can get about 200/hour. That's labeled and cased with 3 people.

                            If you have any luck with kegs please let me know as it would help me out tremendously.

                            Cheers,
                            Andy

                            Sent from my SM-G973U using Tapatalk

                            Comment


                            • #29

                              That’s our setup as well. Three people, last person labeling and packaging.


                              Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

                              Comment


                              • #30



                                Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X