alice-edmund
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2018
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Cor. A real live water treatment worker sticking their head over the parapet - must take a shot at that!
"UK tap water is very consistent" you say, so why does the "alkalinity" of tap water, probably the most important aspect of treating brewing water, vary so widely (water with source in acid moorland)? For example last year I couldn't get my mash pH above 5.0-5.1, this year I'm seeing 5.7 and backing off (calculated) alkaline salt additions quite considerably. Calculators are no help (I use Bru'n Water).
Chlorine content will vary wildly too, but that probably has acceptable reasons and is easily dealt with (metabisulphite doses are not measured accurately and are overdone most times - presuming it works).
Welsh Water is one of the utilities I cover; the alkalinity and pH and chlorine levels of the water you receive are very tightly controlled - and they will happily give you their data for your area. They will certainly NOT be supplying at pH of 5.0; target range will be 7.0 to 9.0 max normally, free chlorine usually 0.2 to 0.5mg/l; alkalinity/pH might be artificially increased depending on your supply area typically using lime or caustic. Your mash could well be 5.0 however depending on what you make it with - but I bet the incoming tapwater is not. If it is, your test method is wrong - or you need to let DCWW know. I have never bothered to check start or final pH of my brews; not sure what it would tell me. NW Wales water is generally quite thin, low conductivity with little alkalinity/buffering.