bunkerbrewer said:ScottM said:Not quite on the same level but I use a fairly complex FG calculation for when the sugar's are known. Obivously with grain brewing this is never going to be the case so it's fairly useless there, but when you know what you are putting into the brew... you can be fairly accurate with what will come out.
...
The assumptions of my calculation are:
You know (or can work out) exactly how much fermentables are being added to your brew.
You know (or can work out) the exact yield of what you are adding.
You know the attenuation of the yeast (Higher attenuation effectively means the yeast is less fussy with it's sugar varieties).
...
FG = OG + 0.624 - sqrt((((100/(1000*volume)*(total fermentability*0.645))*0.789*(yeast attenuation/100*1.33))/100.3)-(OG-(125.65/200.6))^2+0.7817+OG^2-(OG*125.65/100.3));
Interesting stuff, I like a bit of maths and I'm constantly finding ways to make my brewing spreadsheet more complicated :)
I've probably misunderstood, but the above assumptions sound a little bit circular to me? You're calculating the FG, but how do you know the attenuation of the yeast unless you measure the FG? I keep a record of attenuation for each brew, and it's rarely the median of the stated range.
anthonyUK said:So Scott, from a theory perspective it is great to get data to back it up and to also to show that your process is as expected but still no more accurate that reading a glass float?
I don't want that to sound like it is a pointless exercise as that is not intended but an exercise in proving that a hydrometer is correct too?
What percentage attenuation did you get?jarenault said:A few months back at work I knocked up a simple fermentation in a 2L erlenmeyer flask. Just sucrose, yeast and water. Not for drinking, just to test an idea.
Using precision scales, I weighed the set up at the beginning and end and calculated the alcohol produced based on the mass lost in CO2. I also took hydrometer readings and calculated the alcohol content using that, more traditional, method.
There was remarkable consistency between results. I don't have the numbers to hand but it was less than a percentage point. I guess evaporation is somewhat negligible in a closed system with an airlock.
Caveat: n=1
Not sure. I didn't record the amount of sugar I put in. I really just cobbled it together to test the idea, in principle, of measuring alcohol content from loss of mass, so I only weighed the complete set up. I should have tested the attenuation, actually, as it would have been trivial to do so.rpt said:What percentage attenuation did you get?jarenault said:A few months back at work I knocked up a simple fermentation in a 2L erlenmeyer flask. Just sucrose, yeast and water. Not for drinking, just to test an idea.
Using precision scales, I weighed the set up at the beginning and end and calculated the alcohol produced based on the mass lost in CO2. I also took hydrometer readings and calculated the alcohol content using that, more traditional, method.
There was remarkable consistency between results. I don't have the numbers to hand but it was less than a percentage point. I guess evaporation is somewhat negligible in a closed system with an airlock.
Caveat: n=1
Yes, I was asking about the apparent attenuation.ScottM said:You should be able to work out the attenuation based on your OG and FG.
rpt said:Yes, I was asking about the apparent attenuation.ScottM said:You should be able to work out the attenuation based on your OG and FG.
I'll have them somewhere. I'll have a look tomorrow.ScottM said:You should be able to work out the attenuation based on your OG and FG.
Did you keep a hold of the recordings?
I did not know that. Cool.jarenault said:...removed from the body as CO2 in your breath.
Why's that unfortunate?ScottM said:Unfortunately the apparent attenuation will probably be around 110%.
rpt said:Why's that unfortunate?ScottM said:Unfortunately the apparent attenuation will probably be around 110%.
That's why I was asking. I want to know whether that is really true.ScottM said:Attenuation is only really valid when there is a mix of sugars, ie complex through to simple, as the attenuation is based on how far down the road to complex the yeast will go. When a brew is 100% simple sugar, the yeast will convert all the sugar.
Enter your email address to join: