Right, enough of the theory, I'm going to go with adding the hydrochloric to reduce alkalinity to 140, and calcium will be 112. All salts added to the HLT.
Will probably brew on Monday, so will see how it goes.
It's been a very useful thread.

Good advice.killer wrote:I would be inclined to dilute your 33% acid. At that conc. it can fume a bit which is unpleasant if you are opening it every few weeks. You might make a litre of 2 Molar (using distilled water as diluant) at which point it is slightly more manageable, fumes less and is less aggressive on your skin if you spill it. At that concentration it will still last a year or more at the rate you will use it and you won't need to repeatedly open the more conc. stuff. If you do decide to dilute it remember to add the acid to water (not the other way around) bit by bit.
That seems like a good idea.killer wrote:I would be inclined to dilute your 33% acid. At that conc. it can fume a bit which is unpleasant if you are opening it every few weeks. You might make a litre of 2 Molar (using distilled water as diluant) at which point it is slightly more manageable, fumes less and is less aggressive on your skin if you spill it. At that concentration it will still last a year or more at the rate you will use it and you won't need to repeatedly open the more conc. stuff. If you do decide to dilute it remember to add the acid to water (not the other way around) bit by bit.
I fly sparge, with a rotating spage arm.Eric wrote:Good advice.killer wrote:I would be inclined to dilute your 33% acid. At that conc. it can fume a bit which is unpleasant if you are opening it every few weeks. You might make a litre of 2 Molar (using distilled water as diluant) at which point it is slightly more manageable, fumes less and is less aggressive on your skin if you spill it. At that concentration it will still last a year or more at the rate you will use it and you won't need to repeatedly open the more conc. stuff. If you do decide to dilute it remember to add the acid to water (not the other way around) bit by bit.
Rob, how do you sparge?
140mg/l CaCO3 alkalinity in mash liquor will likely be countered by the combination of darker grains and added calcium salts, but a point may come during sparging when those calcium salts and the darker grains are depleted, then alkalinity would raise the pH to cause harshness in the beer. You might consider using some acid to further reduce that alkalinity.
Good luck.