keith1664 wrote:A little help if you would, I now have my copy of the spreadsheet and my water report from Murphy's and I'm having difficulties getting my ions to balance.
Water report says ph 7.11, Nitrate 29.6ppm, Calcium 108ppm, Magnesium 6ppm, Chloride 58.58ppm, Sulphate 58.2ppm and alkalinity as 186 CaCo3.
Inputting these gives me a mismatch of 1.17 meq/L and the Nitrate box goes orange?
Now the report from Murphy's doesn't give me a reading for Sodium and checking the Anglian Water report shows it varies from 24.8-177mg/L with an average of 48.1, is balancing simply a matter of picking a value of sodium to suit?
Of the other "balancing" elements only potassium at 4.8mg/L makes any appreciable difference.
Any ideas gratefully recieved!
You are looking for a balance of less than .5 and I know with my water report there is a very slight difference in the balance (.36) of the cations/anIons. My sodium is 20 which is close to the average so I would adjust that figure till you get it below .5, I asked Paul Taylor about why there was no sodium report, this was his reply
"On the same note we don’t test for sodium (presently) as there is no need. Sodium mainly comes from salt and even if we add salt to a porter or stout you would only ever measure sodium for its calorific value.". He doesn't worry about potassium either citing similar reasons, they are only trace elements and just not that important. He feels water treatment is way too over complicated. Calcium, chloride and magnesium are the most important for him along with the sulphate chloride ratio. He is pretty dismissive of water board reports because of their lack of precision (average figures!) and of course the changes over time. If anyone is going to seriously use Martin's calculator I would say a proper analysis is vital.
Martin follows the thread so if anything is too way out I'm sure he will chip in. As for nitrate that is nothing to worry about mine is 30 and it's a function of where we live, being largely agricultural, this county is plagued by fertiliser run off into the water courses. The level is not dangerous but it can make the webbing on your feet itch from time to time

. My potassium is at 2, so a little surprising there is a difference there. The only other surprise for me with your report is my alkalinity is a lot higher at 262, what is your total hardness as caco3?