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Personally i think its unlikely to be your kegs. as much as it points to that.
the forced diacetyl test can be a difficult one, as the alcohol and other bits in the beer can overtake/overwhlem the senses.
good to see your pitching additional yeast to try and fix it, but i'd also suggest good aeration as well. and depending o nyou OG add more or less yeast.
heres my pitching rates for dry yeast.
1pack up to 1.048
2 packs 1.049 - 1.060
3 packs 1.061 - 1.069
Us-05 is serceptible to diacetyl especially at those lower temps, which people suggest makes the beers cleaner.
the keys to temps are as follows
do not pitch your yeast if above your original ferm temp. pitch at 18 or below, and let free rise to 19
ferments at 19 for 3-4 days and ramps straight up to 21-22 for the remainder of fermentation. let it sit in fermenters for minimum of 14days before kegging or bottling.
the thing is, there are always diacetyl precursors in beer, its just a matter ohw much much remains in the beer post fermentation.
so pitch low with plenty of healthy yeast, rest early and enjoy.
i had the same issue, and mike cheer, gae all the above advice, culminating in a pale ale that received a silver medal in NHC in november.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pediococcus infection from beer lines? or environment?
I had a urquell last year was amazing from keg but the bottles became gushers and super d bombs... I think the bottling process was un sanitary the bottles have just got worse undrinkable butter...
How was your oxygenation?
Did you add any nutrient?
Heavy dry hop with mot?
How are you transferring from fermenter to keg, how are you sterilising your kegs?
For cleaning your beer lines jjust grab some Star LLC (liquid line cleaner). I use a 2L PET bottle with a carbonation/cleaner cap under force to push the cleaner through. I do this between each keg rather than replace the lines since it takes me longer to get the lines onto the barbs with much cussing and mild scolding from heating the lines.
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