Have you also bought a TDS meter?
I have also bought a RO system a few months ago. I have already used it once. My TDS meter gave me a read-out of 7 ppm, which is almost devoid of minerals. I then added gypsum and calciumchloride to mineralise my liquor. Since I already brewed with demineralised water from the shop, I didn't notice any differences.
Busy today gathering water for Friday. Need to plan ahead a little bit. I use the smallest system available, which gives me 1 l of water per 10 minutes, so I need about two hours, or even a little bit more to gather the amount of water I need (I don't do big brews). I can also get rid of the waste water to my rainwater cistern.
Have you nailed all other aspects of your procedure before building your water profile n scratch? It’s a very American and arguably unnecessary approach.
There are various trace minerals in tap water that are beneficial to yeast health, so I tend to go 90% RO maximum, and more usually 50%.I already treat my water from the tap so I’m already used to adding salts. How come you don’t recommend using 100% RO? Is that just personal preference?
They can be attached temporarily, mine in the pic above is attached to the outside tap through the window as and when I need it.Do these need to be plumbed in or can they be fixed temporarily some how?
YepSo if I was to use 90% RO I would just input 10% of my tap waters minerals into a calculator to give me the right amounts of salts to add and then tweak it from there?
You're of course technically correct, however it'll only be off by a few ppm which in practice isn't worth worrying about.Well, that assumes RO water is absolutely pure. Does your RO system specify how much it can remove from tapwater?
I just checked mine with a cheap TDS meter, tap water is 180 ppm, RO 7 ppm and treated mash water 350 ppm.Has anyone had their RO water analysed? It would be great to see before and after ppm's. I've been working with commercial RO plants since the 80's but these were for making potable water from sea-water. They reduced the chlorides (salt) from about 35,000 to 200, but needed very high pressures. Still, that's a reduction of 99.5%.
That's brilliant at that price! How fast does it produce water? Is it just connected to the mains or have you added a pump?£41 on ebay, I think the fact my tap water is already quite soft helps :thumba:
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