

Right..... It's morning. This is defined as that period of the day before the first cup of coffee, so my baud rate is even lower than usual.DaaB wrote:Indeed, if only someone would come up with a water testing kit that cost say, less than a price of a pint that would do 60 odd tests and was distributing it among JHBF brewers
I doubt that any 2 experts agree on the correct ratios for particular beer styles.Northern Brewer wrote:Just had my first play with Graham's excellent calculator, but it does have me scratching my head a little.
Murphy and Son Ltd appear to be in the business of supply brewing salts to the industry and have an interesting article on water treatment here...
http://www.murphyandson.co.uk/BrewingAr ... ywhere.htm
They suggest Sulphate:Chloride ratios of 2:1 for Bitters, 1:2 for Milds and 1:3 for Stouts and Porters, whereas Graham's calculator indicates 1:1 for Bitters, 1:1.5 for Mild, 1:3 for Porter and 0:4 for Stouts.
I appreciate that the calculator allows me to tweak these ratios as I see fit, but I am nevertheless curious as to the disparities.
I think you'll need the alkalinity though - there's a note from Graham somewhere that says the hardness column is for use as last resort - I'm buggered if I know where it is now!flything wrote:For Graham's water calculator my water co, Severn Trent, only suppy the amounts for Calcium (89mg/l), Sodium (34mg/l), Sulphate (27m/gl) & Chloride (71mg/l), they supply hardness as degrees Clark (15.6).
So-called typical sulphate / chloride ratios vary depending upon where you look. The ratios in the calculator are the average of about five different references and then adjusted to convenient round(ish) numbers. They should not be regarded as fixed; the whole idea of sulphate / chloride ratios is for flavour adjustment, as in adding salt and pepper to food; it is subjective. The effect of these ratios is only apparent with low gravity, low-bodied beers. With hoppier beers or beers with more assertive malt flavours these effects are masked. Most waters contain very little natural chloride so, historically, high chloride levels would not be present and it would be quite in order to omit the chloride altogether.Northern Brewer wrote:Just had my first play with Graham's excellent calculator, but it does have me scratching my head a little.
Murphy and Son Ltd appear to be in the business of supply brewing salts to the industry and have an interesting article on water treatment here...
http://www.murphyandson.co.uk/BrewingAr ... ywhere.htm
They suggest Sulphate:Chloride ratios of 2:1 for Bitters, 1:2 for Milds and 1:3 for Stouts and Porters, whereas Graham's calculator indicates 1:1 for Bitters, 1:1.5 for Mild, 1:3 for Porter and 0:4 for Stouts.
I appreciate that the calculator allows me to tweak these ratios as I see fit, but I am nevertheless curious as to the disparities.
The programme probably thinks that all your sodium is bound to carbonate as sodium carbonate. As you reduce the carbonate, the programme finds that some of the sodium has nothing to bind to and so drops it because it cannot exist as such. The carbonate and sodium remaining does match the sodium carbonate ratio. What is worrying is that your ion balance is correct, so it should have found something to bind to. The trouble is that the ions can combine in a dozen ways, but I have to chose a particular fixed pecking order for pairing up the results that best suits brewing. Doing the sums in a different order can produce slightly different results. I wouldn't mind your water figures so that I can go through manually and see what is happening.coatesg wrote:Been playing with this myself - have obtained some methyl orange and looking to test my alkalinity next week - so playing round with this to look at what kind of additions I think I can expect. I've found an oddity in the sodium column though.
My water report states a 2007 average value of 18.5mg/l for sodium ions. If I choose a target liquor with target sodium ion conc=0 (eg pale ale), and choose CRS with residual alk. = 20, then the final liquor row for sodium comes back as 9.18blah... This seems wrong - I can't have reduced the sodium value by additions? If I set the carb reduction method to boiling - the final liquor value comes back as 0!
Is there something wrong here? I've checked the balance of the ions in the original and target water (6.45/6.47 and 8.4/8.39 respectively) so I don't think there's too much wrong there...
The reason that the hardness box should be used as a last resort is because alkalinity and hardness are not the same thing, although they are often treated as such. If one has as figure for alkalinity, then it should be used in preference because it should be more accurate. However, as the hardness figure got the calcium figure spot on, you can rely on it as being accurate.flything wrote:For Graham's water calculator my water co, Severn Trent, only suppy the amounts for Calcium (89mg/l), Sodium (34mg/l), Sulphate (27m/gl) & Chloride (71mg/l), they supply hardness as degrees Clark (15.6).
Looking back through this thread Vossy has given a formula for converting Clark to CaCO3 ( * 14.3) which gives me 223.08mg/l of CaCO3.
So, if I key this number in first it automatically fills in the Calcium and Carbonate levels on line 2, the calcium is spot on, I don't have levels from the water co for carbonate so have to assume that 133.7mg/l is correct.
I then key in the numbers for Sodium, Sulphate and Chloride.
This leaves the magnesium empty. The two Ion fields don't match, I therefore play around and by entering 13.2mg/l for magnesium the numbers match (7.02), and get this:
I've read various comments about the hardness box, that it should be used as a last resort, if so how accurate/useful is this likely to be in determining the treatment I need to do to match my water to the various regions?
The link to Severn Trent's water info is hereflything wrote:For Graham's water calculator my water co, Severn Trent, only suppy the amounts for Calcium (89mg/l), Sodium (34mg/l), Sulphate (27m/gl) & Chloride (71mg/l), they supply hardness as degrees Clark (15.6).
Let me know when done Graham and I can upload the new version.Graham wrote:As it happens I am doing some revision work on the calculator at the moment to address other issues that have arisen in this thread (and to correct a minor bug that I discovered this morning).
Cheers! Nearly done, apart from testing.Andy wrote:Let me know when done Graham and I can upload the new version.Graham wrote:As it happens I am doing some revision work on the calculator at the moment to address other issues that have arisen in this thread (and to correct a minor bug that I discovered this morning).
Yeah, that's where I got some info from, but to get calcium and sulphate you have to go to the detailed report that links from that page.The link to Severn Trent's water info is here