bobukbrewer
Landlord.
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2015
- Messages
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I have tried pH papers in the past - they do not work. I am adding AMS which is HCl and H2SO4, this is dropping the pH, I have to hope into the right range.
I beg to differ, but good luck.they do not work.
Didn’t work for me either I contacted the manufacturer who stated that it was probably due to a storage issue at too high a temperature.I beg to differ, but good luck.
Steve....I know this is an older post...but for those of us who are science challenged. I live in Tallahassee FL and the 2022 City water report gives information specific to Brewers interest as follows: Calcium 43 mg/l, Magnesium 12 mg/l, Hardness 155 mg/l as calcium carbonate CaCO3 or 9 grains per gallon and a pH value of 7.5. Alkalinity 143 mg/l. They don't list Sulfate anywhere that I can find...and Brew Father's app ask for Sulfate as part of the water salts entry.There's a few ways to measure out the additions. For liquids such as lactic acid or CRS, use a syringe (like the ones that come with the Salifert kits). You can usually get these from a pharmacy or chemist.
For the salts, the best way is using jewellery scales which can be bought for a few quid on ebay. THIS is the one I use. If you don't have scales with the necessary accuracy, another method is to make a solution up by measuring, for example, 5g of gypsum and adding it to 2L of water (this is about the solubility limit of gypsum). Then you can add the appropriate amount of solution, 40ml=0.1g of gypsum. A third, and much less accurate option, is to measure out in teaspoons, 1 level tsp= approx 4g of gypsum.
No need to "drown in too much information", but you certainly have "not enough".Drowning in too much information and not enough.
Maintaining accurate records is part of The Water Supply (Water Quality) Regulations 2016, too.If a chemist analyses water for calcium content, how can that figure be incorrect ?
...Convert the pretend Calcium back to pretend "Calcium Carbonate": 10.42 / 40% = 26.06. The "magic number" that converts Magnesium into "Calcium Carbonate" is 4.118 (just 4.1 will do). So, 26.06 / 4.118 = 6.33mg/L of Magnesium ions (with the 111.45mg/L of Calcium ions).
The figure isn't incorrect (unless it's really cocked up ... everyone can make mistakes!). But you do have to understand how they are arriving at it or what you think it is telling you will be incorrect.If a chemist analyses water for calcium content, how can that figure be incorrect ?
This (sub-)discussion started off with a "Hardness" analysis. At which point you have to put on your loony hat, and grab a bar of soap! (Okay, they do it a bit more accurately these days, but it's still Land of Narnia stuff). Stick with straight-forward "real" ion analysis (there's only a small handful that are useful) and "Alkalinity" ... I find "as HCO3" easiest because for brewing it mostly "is HCO3"!if I analyse a metal for tin, I do not want the copper level ...
Ah, I thought I was probably over complicating the issue.You’ll probably find the values are PPM (Parts per Million) so it doesn’t matter if you are using 1 litre or a thousand litres. The values are the same
I would question why you have decided to use that water? Is your tap water no good?
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