Anyone for chemical warfare?
Antiformin S isn't the product they sell as a beer line cleaner (although you can use it as that). They sell an even stronger version (Antiformin PCD) for that.
There is a beer line cleaner you can buy which is purple so you can tell when you've rinsed it out of the lines.
Antiformin is a very effective cleaner and cleans corni kegs up a treat. As a chlorinated product you should keep contact with stainless down to a minimum though. As with many hazardous materials, they are only hazardous when the correct precautions are not used and if they are not treated with the respect they deserve. Always wear thick gloves and always wear chemically resistant goggles.
There is a beer line cleaner you can buy which is purple so you can tell when you've rinsed it out of the lines.
Antiformin is a very effective cleaner and cleans corni kegs up a treat. As a chlorinated product you should keep contact with stainless down to a minimum though. As with many hazardous materials, they are only hazardous when the correct precautions are not used and if they are not treated with the respect they deserve. Always wear thick gloves and always wear chemically resistant goggles.
Useful for customers in pubs to point out to bar staff that they are using the wrong pump too (when they don't notice themselves that the pint they are starting to pour "isn't quite right")steve_flack wrote: There is a beer line cleaner you can buy which is purple so you can tell when you've rinsed it out of the lines.
(Had to stop a barman once when this happened...



Once when at Rolls Royce Works social club a mate of mine ordered a blackcurrant and lemonade and then necked it pretty quick as we had just played rugby .. needless to say he threw up, the idiots had stored the purple cleaner in a 5l cordial container with no label, he was all right though... and they still charged him for the real blackcurrant and lemonadesteve_flack wrote: There is a beer line cleaner you can buy which is purple so you can tell when you've rinsed it out of the lines.
