peebee
Out of Control
... It looks, if you want to build something to calculate your minerals, that this four part series is a simpler way to start with. It is already more or less algorithmic in nature.
I found the four articles, all from June 2016:
Brewing Liquor for Pale Beers (0–10 SRM)
Brewing Liquor for Amber Beers (10–20 SRM)
Brewing Liquor for Brown Beers (20–30 SRM)
Brewing Liquor for Dark Beers (30–40 SRM)
I'll flick through them later. Thanks.
I don't really want "a simpler way": I've already done a hatchet job on "RA" and pared its imitations down to its bare bones (how Paul Kolbach saw it seventy years ago? "RA"="Alkalinity"-"Ca++"/3.5-"Mg++"/7 *** ... everything measured as milliequivalents per litre; for which I spouted a summarised explanation which I'll probably tidy before I'm done, if I even need to?). The three-axis graph I did should make a basis for a very visual output covering any beer, be it the lightest of third world "lager" or darkest "Real Ale" Stout. Because I don't want another "water calculator" where you copy well water from some location or other, or, add a bit here, a bit there, and make sure it all balances. I want a pictural driven calculator that will cover everything (beery that is!). A month ago, I'd have said to anyone suggesting such a thing to not be so daft. I'm not so sure now.
This seems such an obvious thing to do ... has anyone actually done it (would save me the effort). Or have I disengaged my imagination from anything resembling reality ... I'm really good at that!
*** All "RA" is, is a judgment of how much "Alkalinity" remains after some is consumed by malt phosphates reacting with water-borne Calcium and Magnesium ions.
Anyone got a better summary?
The equation can also be written "RA"="Alkalinity"-(("Ca++"+"Mg++"/2)/3.5) but I don't think that looks as neat (all of them brackets ... ugh).
Seems the amount of "Alkalinity" consumed depends on the water concentration (mg per litre) of Ca/Mg ions, not the total number of the ions in the mash? Or the total number of malt phosphates in the mash? i.e. The amount of malt and the ratio of water mixed with it is immaterial?