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Look on Maltmiller for DWB. I can email you some docs if you dm me.
Thank you!Roger that! Here is a link to the southwest water homepage, there is a a search bar halfway down where you can enter a postcode and check your water.. just use EX31 1LQ (car dealership across the road)..
https://www.southwestwater.co.uk/
Thanks again peebee, I shall adjust my brewfather water profile accordingly!View attachment 96832
That's better!
We've got "alkalinity", but three of the required parameters are still grey - not directly reported but manufactured from the information available. So, Magnesium is still "guessed" as 10% of the Calcium figure (Looks odd? That's because Magnesium is lighter than the Calcium it was pretending to be!).
The figures drift about a lot in the report, although the amounts of variation are tiny because the values used (means) are all tiny. I'll come back with the implications later ...
Yep, North. Water for me too, agree v helpful reportOn a whim I've just checked the water quality report for my area and they have a brewer's section showing the relevant info. Thumbs up to Northumbrian water
I don't think it was just you. It takes a bulldozer to shift some of these multi-national criminal syndicates responsible for most of our drinking water (after a misguided UK government simply handed over the reigns to them ... after ensuring they be paid fat wodges of the UK taxpayers' cash for the "service").... Possibly after me bothering their water quality scientist for this info every year.
Me neitherMine don't have a specific brewer's section, but they have started including Alkalinity, Magnesium, and TDS in the newest report. Possibly after me bothering their water quality scientist for this info every year.
And I haven't yet. So I'll put that right ...... I'll come back with the implications later ...
IGNORE that "Total Hardness" section! And that "Calcium Carbonate" twaddle in the next section. But the remaining six items is all you need!
I use spotless these days. As I said I checked it on a whim. Must say, though, the profile looks ok. Might give it a go at some point using it as it is (apart from putting in the dechlorination stuff, what is it again ? Metabisulphate ?).IGNORE that "Total Hardness" section! And that "Calcium Carbonate" twaddle in the next section. But the remaining six items is all you need!
There isn't any "Calcium Carbonate" in your water. None! If you were to have very alkaline water (>pH8.0), and I can tell you haven't, you might be able to detect some carbonate (CO3), but nothing of consequence to brewing.
You do not need "HARDNESS"!
Some people can use hardness to satisfactory effect. But it's an advanced, and dying, art!
I spend a lot of time on the "sister" forum now "www.homebrewtalk.com": It's American, and quite refreshing in that you see very little "hardness" in discussions. It's all bicarbonate and alkalinity ... real, physical values, not this pretend, arcane, "hardness" stuff!
Sodium metabisulfite or potassium metabisulfite or half a crushed Camden tablet to 25 litres , don't forget ! even with a water report domestic supply does vary at times.I use spotless these days. As I said I checked it on a whim. Must say, though, the profile looks ok. Might give it a go at some point using it as it is (apart from putting in the dechlorination stuff, what is it again ? Metabisulphate ?).
Good on you for considering going back to tap water. Your report looks pretty good. Nothing in excess, nothing desperately short (mmm ... "Calcium" is somewhat short). The tap water should be most effective at meeting your requirements.I use spotless these days. As I said I checked it on a whim. Must say, though, the profile looks ok. Might give it a go at some point using it as it is (apart from putting in the dechlorination stuff, what is it again ? Metabisulphate ?).
Don't lose sight of the fact that water is an ingredient that goes into making your beer taste like your beer.
Sodium metabisulfite or potassium metabisulfite or half a crushed Camden tablet to 25 litres , don't forget ! even with a water report domestic supply does vary at times.
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