100ml of plain water weighs 100grams, right...? Hmmm... my old physics teacher would have grimaced and said "No, 100ml of water has a mass of 100g".
Stay with me here...
For various reasons today I decided to check the calibration of my hydrometer. It's a decent Stevenson Reed glass one, calibrated at 20ºc.
First I checked two 0.1g kitchen scales using a 200g calibration weight. The first read 200.0g and the second 200.5g.
Next I weighed my calibrated lab-glass 100ml measuring cylinder. One balance read 142.8g and the other 143.4g.
Then I very carefully measured 100ml of plain tap water at 20ºc into the cylinder (as a cross-check I did so using ten x 10ml syringe-fulls).
Then I checked the SG of the water with my hydrometer, which read 1.000 on the nose.
The weight of the water? Well, minus the weight of the cylinder, the first balance said 98.8g and the second 99.3g. Hmmm. (I then repeated the experiment and got 98.8g and 99.1g).
Not content with this I tried again using strong saline solution, measured by hydrometer at SG 1.100.
This time I got 108.0g and 108.7g; and on the rerun 108.4g and 108.8g.
What the heck?? Either the hydrometer, both volume measurements or both balances are out by about 1.5%. That doesn't sound like much, but it's the difference between measuring the SG as 1084 versus 1100 !!
That was when I thought back to my physics teacher... how much force would a 100g mass exert on the scales? Ummm well the 'schoolboy' answer is 1 Newton; but the more accurate answer is 9.81 Newtons.
Now... that 9.81 does look rather similar to what the scales gave when I measured the 100ml of SG 1.000 water... and it's also consistent with the measured weight of the SG 1.100 saline...
So what do you reckon is more likely? My SR hydrometer is telling fibs, or the designers of kitchen scales cut corners and assume the value of 'g' is 10 rather than 9.81 ??
I should add that the '200g' calibration weight was supplied along with the kitchen scales... so does it really weigh 200g?
Stay with me here...
For various reasons today I decided to check the calibration of my hydrometer. It's a decent Stevenson Reed glass one, calibrated at 20ºc.
First I checked two 0.1g kitchen scales using a 200g calibration weight. The first read 200.0g and the second 200.5g.
Next I weighed my calibrated lab-glass 100ml measuring cylinder. One balance read 142.8g and the other 143.4g.
Then I very carefully measured 100ml of plain tap water at 20ºc into the cylinder (as a cross-check I did so using ten x 10ml syringe-fulls).
Then I checked the SG of the water with my hydrometer, which read 1.000 on the nose.
The weight of the water? Well, minus the weight of the cylinder, the first balance said 98.8g and the second 99.3g. Hmmm. (I then repeated the experiment and got 98.8g and 99.1g).
Not content with this I tried again using strong saline solution, measured by hydrometer at SG 1.100.
This time I got 108.0g and 108.7g; and on the rerun 108.4g and 108.8g.
What the heck?? Either the hydrometer, both volume measurements or both balances are out by about 1.5%. That doesn't sound like much, but it's the difference between measuring the SG as 1084 versus 1100 !!
That was when I thought back to my physics teacher... how much force would a 100g mass exert on the scales? Ummm well the 'schoolboy' answer is 1 Newton; but the more accurate answer is 9.81 Newtons.
Now... that 9.81 does look rather similar to what the scales gave when I measured the 100ml of SG 1.000 water... and it's also consistent with the measured weight of the SG 1.100 saline...
So what do you reckon is more likely? My SR hydrometer is telling fibs, or the designers of kitchen scales cut corners and assume the value of 'g' is 10 rather than 9.81 ??
I should add that the '200g' calibration weight was supplied along with the kitchen scales... so does it really weigh 200g?