Beer tap – Induction Coil – Pneumatic Accessories manufacturer
Usage
Pressure-dispense bar tap
Almost universally in modern times, bulk beer is supplied in kegs that are served with the aid of external pressure. In a normal bar dispense system, this pressure comes from a cylinder of carbon dioxide (or occasionally nitrogen) which forces the beer out of the keg and up a narrow tube to the bar. At the end of this tube is a valve built into a fixture (usually somewhat decorative) on the bar. This is the beer tap, and opening it with a small lever causes beer, pushed by the gas from the cylinder, to flow into the glass.
Portable keg tap
Sometimes, beer kegs designed to be connected to the above system are instead used on their own, perhaps at a party or outdoor event. In this case, a self-contained portable tap is required that allows beer to be served straight from the keg. Because the keg system uses pressure to force the beer up and out of the keg, these taps must have a means of supplying it. The typical “picnic tap” uses a hand pump to push air into the keg; this will cause the beer to spoil faster but is perfectly acceptable if the entire keg will be consumed in a short time. Portable taps with small CO2 cylinders are also available.
Cask beer tap
Gravity cask tap.
Beers brewed and served by traditional methods, typically cask ale, do not use artificial gas. Taps for cask beer are simple on-off valves that are hammered into the end of the cask (see keystone for details). When beer is served directly from the cask (“by gravity”), as at beer festivals and some pubs, it simply flows out of the tap and into the glass. When the cask is stored in the cellar and served from the bar, as in most pubs, the beer line is screwed onto the tap and the beer is pulled through it by a beer engine. The taps used are the same, and in beer-line setups the first pint is often poured from the cask as for “gravity”, for tasting, before the line is connected. Cask beer taps can be brass (now discouraged for fear of lead contamination), stainless steel, plastic, and wood.
In Scotland, cask ale was traditionally served through a tall fount. These appear similar to keg taps (indeed, many Scottish pubs serve keg beer through adapted tall founts) rendered from brass but the beer was drawn from the barrel via air pressure generated by a water engine rather than by a pressurised artificial gas. Some pubs still dispense cask beer using this method (although the water engine will invariably have been replaced by an electric compressor) but is increasingly rare due to the perception that hand-pumps are the ‘correct’ means by which to serve real ale, and to the potential for confusion with keg ale, which is regarded as inferior by many beer drinkers.
Temprite
In Australia, there is a range of a portable and fixed beer coolers and dispensers under the trade name “Temprite”. The keg beer is attached to the machine by a flexible hose, and the beer flows through a cooler system to a tap. On simple Temprites, the beer flows through copper pipes in an ice box; for more expensive models, a refrigeration unit cools the beer. Temprites can have multiple beers using the same cooler system.
See also
Beer engine
Draught beer
Tap (valve)
References
^ Beer Brand – Keg Tap Listing
^ O’Neill, Patrick (2005) Cellarmanship, CAMRA Publications pp.6869
^ Portable temprite, home brew blog, accessed 2009-08-18
Categories: Beer vessels and serving | Valves
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