The process begins with CO2 being attached to a primary regulator. This regulator is responsible for feeding the keg with CO2. The pressure from the CO2 pushes down on the beer, forcing it to move upwards through the keg spear. From there, the beer flows out through the beer coupler. Depending on the setup, it either goes into a temporary draft system, like a jockey box, or into another type of system, such as a long draw draft system.
In the case of a long draw draft system, the setup is similar. Gas feeds into the keg, pushing the beer through the keg into the beer line. It then enters the main trunk line. This trunk line could be a glycol or air-chilled system that leads into barrier tubing. The barrier tubing, which could be a coil or a cold plate similar to what is seen in a jockey box, ultimately channels the beer to the beer faucet.
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About Coldbreak:
Coldbreak didn’t invent the jockey box. We don’t own that claim to fame. But we were the first to turn it from a makeshift beer-chilling solution into a premium, quality-engineered brand. And over the years, we’ve never stopped refining and adding products-improving, tweaking, and customizing based what our customers want and need.
We’re one of those “Where’d you get that?” businesses. We grew organically at festivals and events, where communities gather and word travels fast. Now, we’re trusted by thousands of customers across the nation, including breweries that have become household names.
For us, this has always been a labor of love. We’ve spilled a lot of sweat and shed a lot of beard hair over the years, all for the best mobile draft equipment money can buy.
#Coldbreak #DraftSystems101 #PerfectPour #Coldbreakusa
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Customer Service
Coldbreak
support@coldbreakusa.com
@coldbreakusa
(616) 591-0200 (M-F 9-4 ET)
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