Silver_Is_Money
Larry Sayre, Developer of 'Mash Made Easy'
First we will exhibit this in units of Lbs. and Gal's and Deg. F., and then we will exhibit it for units of Kg. and Liters and Deg's C.
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Example: If I collect 7 gallons pre boil at 150 degrees F. and its SG (or OG) is 1.043, and my mash efficiency is 73%, what inferred initial weight of grist did I begin with?
1st, lets establish a baseline for gravity points:
1 Lb. of sugar when dissolved in 1 Gallon of water yields a SG of 1.04621
1000(1.04621 - 1) = 46.21 gravity points
Lets assume that for the average grist the course grind efficiency vs. pure sugar is 78%
46.21 x 0.78 = 36.0438
Now lets apply our mash efficiency of 73%
36.0438 x 0.73 = 26.312 gravity points per pound per gallon
This means we should expect 1 Lb. of our recipe/grist when mashed in 1 Gallon of water to yield a SG of 1.026312
We have collected 7 gallons of 1.043 SG Wort at 150 degrees F.
At room temperature we will have 7 x 0.98 = 6.86 gallons
6.86 x 1000(1.043 - 1) = 294.98 gravity points
294.98/26.312 = 11.21 Lbs. of inferred initial grist weight
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The above in Metric units:
Example: If I collect 26.5 Liters pre boil at 65.6 degrees C. and its SG (or OG) is 1.043, and my mash efficiency is 73%, what inferred initial weight of grist did I begin with?
1st, lets establish a baseline for gravity points:
1 Kg. of sugar when dissolved in 1 Liter of water yields a SG of 1.3856
1000(1.3856 - 1) = 385.6 gravity points
Lets assume that for the average grist the course grind efficiency vs. pure sugar is 78%
385.6 x 0.78 = 300.768
Now lets apply our mash efficiency of 73%
300.768 x 0.73 = 219.561 gravity points per Kg. per Liter
This means we should expect 1 Kg. of our recipe/grist when mashed in 1 Liter of water to yield a SG of 1.219561
We have collected 26.5 gallons of 1.043 SG Wort at 65.6 degrees C.
At room temperature we will have 26.5 x 0.98 = 25.97 Liters
25.97 x 1000(1.043 - 1) = 1,116.71 gravity points
1,116.71/219.561 = 5.086 Kg. of inferred initial grist weight
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Example: If I collect 7 gallons pre boil at 150 degrees F. and its SG (or OG) is 1.043, and my mash efficiency is 73%, what inferred initial weight of grist did I begin with?
1st, lets establish a baseline for gravity points:
1 Lb. of sugar when dissolved in 1 Gallon of water yields a SG of 1.04621
1000(1.04621 - 1) = 46.21 gravity points
Lets assume that for the average grist the course grind efficiency vs. pure sugar is 78%
46.21 x 0.78 = 36.0438
Now lets apply our mash efficiency of 73%
36.0438 x 0.73 = 26.312 gravity points per pound per gallon
This means we should expect 1 Lb. of our recipe/grist when mashed in 1 Gallon of water to yield a SG of 1.026312
We have collected 7 gallons of 1.043 SG Wort at 150 degrees F.
At room temperature we will have 7 x 0.98 = 6.86 gallons
6.86 x 1000(1.043 - 1) = 294.98 gravity points
294.98/26.312 = 11.21 Lbs. of inferred initial grist weight
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The above in Metric units:
Example: If I collect 26.5 Liters pre boil at 65.6 degrees C. and its SG (or OG) is 1.043, and my mash efficiency is 73%, what inferred initial weight of grist did I begin with?
1st, lets establish a baseline for gravity points:
1 Kg. of sugar when dissolved in 1 Liter of water yields a SG of 1.3856
1000(1.3856 - 1) = 385.6 gravity points
Lets assume that for the average grist the course grind efficiency vs. pure sugar is 78%
385.6 x 0.78 = 300.768
Now lets apply our mash efficiency of 73%
300.768 x 0.73 = 219.561 gravity points per Kg. per Liter
This means we should expect 1 Kg. of our recipe/grist when mashed in 1 Liter of water to yield a SG of 1.219561
We have collected 26.5 gallons of 1.043 SG Wort at 65.6 degrees C.
At room temperature we will have 26.5 x 0.98 = 25.97 Liters
25.97 x 1000(1.043 - 1) = 1,116.71 gravity points
1,116.71/219.561 = 5.086 Kg. of inferred initial grist weight