5 Signs Your Commercial Draft System Needs Immediate Repair
Draft beer problems don't announce themselves with flashing lights. They sneak up during peak hours, costing you product, time, and customers.
Commercial draft systems run hard in busy bars and restaurants. When they fail, small issues become expensive fast. Recognizing warning signs early lets you fix problems before they cascade into major service disruptions.
Slow or Inconsistent Pours
Beer that trickles instead of pours signals pressure problems. Customers wait longer, staff gets frustrated, and tabs take longer to close.
This usually traces to failing regulators, clogged lines, or worn couplers. Kegs connect fine but beer barely moves. During rush hour, one slow tap backs up the entire bar.
Regular maintenance catches these early. When pours slow across multiple taps, shut down service and call a technician. Continuing risks burning out regulators or starving lines of proper pressure.
Excessive Foam Across Multiple Taps
One foamy tap might be a dirty faucet. Foam across 2+ taps points to system-wide temperature or pressure failure.
Warm beer lines, over-pressurized CO2, or glycol chiller breakdowns cause carbonation to escape prematurely. Customers receive half beer, half foam wasted product, and unhappy guests.
Foam issues spread fast because draft systems interconnect. A single cooling failure affects every tap. Don't adjust pressure blindly; temperature problems mimic pressure issues.
Visible Leaks or Gas Smells
Puddles under the tower, hissing sounds, or CO2 smell mean fittings failed. Leaks waste gas and compromise pressure throughout the system.
Gas side leaks create slow pours; liquid side leaks waste beer. Tiny drips become gushers during service. Staff often patch with tape, temporary fixes that fail the next keg.
Inspect daily during closing. Any moisture, residue, or unusual smell demands immediate attention. CO2 leaks also pose safety risks in tight bar spaces.
Beer Tastes Off or Flat
Customers notice flavor before foam. Stale, sour, or cardboard tastes signal dirty lines or bacterial growth.
Yeast, protein, and organic buildup coat lines internally. Clean beer leaving the keg picks up contamination before the glass. Flat pours follow when carbonation escapes through dirty contact points.
Off-flavors hit reputation hardest. Repeat customers vanish when every pint tastes wrong. Health departments also flag beer line bacteria during routine inspections.
Equipment Making Strange Noises
Glycol chillers humming normally shouldn't grind, rattle, or cycle constantly. Pumps straining or compressors clicking signal mechanical failure.
Noise means components work harder than designed. Early bearing wear, low refrigerant, or clogged coils create telltale sounds before total breakdown.
Quiet operation prevents escalation. Continuing service risks complete chiller failure, leaving all taps warm. Staff often ignore "normal" noise until disaster hits.
The Hidden Cost of Ignoring Warning Signs
One foamy Friday night costs hundreds in waste and lost sales. Weekly issues compound into thousands monthly. Equipment strain from neglect doubles repair bills.
Systems push limits during events. Warning signs during quiet shifts predict Friday failures. Proactive service protects weekend revenue.
Daily Walkthrough Checklist
Front-of-house staff catch issues early with simple habits.
Closing routine:
- Test pour every tap (look, taste, foam)
- Check for puddles or residue
- Listen around chiller/pump area
- Feel lines for warmth
- Sniff for gas near couplers
Morning startup:
- Full system pressure test
- Inspect keg connections
- Verify chiller temps
- Note any overnight changes
When DIY Fixes Fail
Tape on leaks, pressure tweaks, faucet disassembly, staff fixes work short-term. They mask symptoms while root causes worsen.
Commercial systems demand precision. Wrong pressure destroys keg carbonation. Over-tightened fittings crack couplers. Untrained cleaning spreads bacteria.
Professional diagnosis tests full system balance, not just visible problems. Technicians carry specialized tools unavailable to bar staff.
What Technicians Check First
Diagnostic sequence:
- Temperature at every point (keg, line, tower)
- Pressure at regulator output vs. line restriction
- Glycol levels, pH, pump operation
- Coupler and fitting integrity
- Line cleanliness via ATP swab
Most failures trace to 2-3 interconnected issues. Single-point fixes return problems weekly.
Repair vs. Replacement Decision
Patch old systems or upgrade? Consider:
- Age (10+ years usually replace)
- Repair frequency (monthly = replace)
- Capacity vs. current volume
- Future expansion plans
New systems pay back through reliability. Repairs buy time, not solutions for growing operations.
Industry Maintenance Standards
Brewers Association recommends quarterly full audits. Bi-monthly line cleaning prevents 80% failures. Monthly glycol service extends chiller life 3x.
High-volume bars exceed these. Weekly line spot-checks, monthly full service keeps systems peak performing.
Call Brewskis Before Friday
Emergency repairs hit hardest during peak revenue hours. Scheduled service prevents disasters.
Brewskis Beverage Service responds fast with fully stocked vans. Certified technicians fix most issues same-day.

AUTHOR:
Brewskis Beverage Service
Brewskis Beverage is a draft beer service company that specializes in draft system repair, installation, and custom beer tower design.
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If you're in need of a draft beer system, be sure to check out Brewskis Beverage. We offer a wide selection of direct-draw beer systems that are perfect for any business. We also offer repair and installation services, so you can be sure your system is always up and running. Contact us today to learn more!
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