Silver_Is_Money
Larry Sayre, Developer of 'Mash Made Easy'
I downloaded both. Very impressive. How do you do it so quickly?
I downloaded both. Very impressive. How do you do it so quickly?
Yes. Definitely a Medalion d'Or for you too!Very impressive. How do you do it so quickly?
When I measured Weyermann's sauermalz I got, for pHDI, a, b and c
Weyermann Sauermalz 3.6165 -292.09 68.443 -5.3985
Joe Walts (who only made three measurements) data yields
Sauermalz Weyermann Joe Walts 3.41 -345.93 69.432 0
Kai measured 2 samples. His measurements yield.
Sauermalz 3.43 -138.8546256 0 0
Sauermalz Weyermann 3.44 -158.4955752 0 0
The question about a and color is a good one. Run dowm dmr's Part III paper referenced earlier in this thread. He has some data in which he relates color to a. As I've said before I think it is in answering questions like that that the challenge lies. Getting the math right is pretty easy.
That's not going to work because while sauermalz does contain acid (sauer) it also contains malt (malz). Thus in addition to the buffering of the lactate ion there is buffering from the malt anions too. The following graph shows the measured titration curve for 1 kg sauermalz (Weyermann) and for 50 grams (5% of a kg) of lactic acidWhat about modeling Sauermalz based on Lactic acid % and weight?
That's not going to work because while sauermalz does contain acid (sauer) it also contains malt (malz). Thus in addition to the buffering of the lactate ion there is buffering from the malt anions too. The following graph shows the measured titration curve for 1 kg sauermalz (Weyermann) and for 50 grams (5% of a kg) of lactic acid
View attachment 578917
I added in Sauermalz to the troubleshooter by reverse engineering KW 1.58. The calculation is as follows:
QSauermalz (mEq) = ( 1000 * ( Sauermalz Lactic Acid % / 100 ) * Sauermalz (g) ) / 90
for 111 grams of 3% Sauermalz, KW 1.58 shows a pH shift of -0.13. After using the solver in the deLange Water Troubelshooter, pH shift is -0.148. So on the right track...
If one assumes (on first approximation) that acidulated malt is roughly 3% lactic acid by weight, then couldn't you just multiply the weight of your recipes added acid malt by 0.03 and then, utilizing the resultant new weight, treat it from that point forward as if it was now at a concentration of 100% lactic acid? I'm always trying to simplify. I know that for minute precision the graph above details that this approach won't work, but will it be in the proverbial ballpark?
Are you considering that pH is emphatically a logarithmic function? Perhaps I'm missing something, but (unless Bg is based upon the log scale) I don't see any logarithmic nature to your pH equations.
Bg, the buffering, is in units of mEq/kg•pH. I don't really know what 'color based acidity' is but given that it is called acidity I assume it is in units of mEq/kg. Dividing by mEq/kg•pH would give (mEq/kg)/(mEq/kg•pH) = pH.Are you considering that pH is emphatically a logarithmic function? Perhaps I'm missing something, but (unless Bg is based upon the log scale) I don't see any logarithmic nature to your pH equations.
I don't really know what 'color based acidity' is but given that it is called acidity I assume it is in units of mEq/kg.
Bg, the buffering, is in units of mEq/kg•pH. I don't really know what 'color based acidity' is but given that it is called acidity I assume it is in units of mEq/kg. Dividing by mEq/kg•pH would give (mEq/kg)/(mEq/kg•pH) = pH.
dmr adds some confusion in his paper by stating that pH is, as it is the log of something, dimensionless. In particular -log(acH+/acref) where acH+ is the activity of hydrogen and acref is a reference activity equal to 1, is dimensionless because acH+/acref is dimensionless. But even so -log(acH+/acref) does have dimension because there is a defined pH scale dependent on the choice of acref and the type of logarithm Sørenson chose to use. Had he chosen to use the natural rather than the Briggs logarithm the scale would be different. The pHaj of pure water would be -ln(1e-7) = 16.1181 and we would express buffering in terms of mEq/kg•pHaj
Color based acidity is the commonly used Lovibond based approximation of the grain's Q value in mEq/kg.
A.J.: For clarity, does variable 'Bg' contain buried within it a hidden true logarithmic nature, or is it somewhat empirical in that regard?
Color based acidity is the commonly used Lovibond based approximation of the grain's Q value in mEq/kg.
This is effectively what I've been eluding to when I state that the data (although you can squeeze a slope out of it) appears to be nigh-on derived from "scatter charts". You can only squeeze so much from a turnip. My spreadsheet is in the same boat with all others in this regard. I have some Briess data for my slopes, and others use their own collected data to create these scatter charts and derive "nominal" value from them. Either way the "fit" is somewhat (to perhaps highly) questionable in the end, and I believe this is what A.J. doesn't understand (as in likely: "I can't understand why everyone but me is willing to get along while using such bad data fits".).
Yes, in the sense that its units are mEq/kg•pH and pH is clearly a logarithmic measure. But I'll admit that dmr's calling it mEq/kg because he thinks pH is dimensionless and the knowledge that you guys rely heavily on his paper has gotten me a bit unclear on this.A.J.: For clarity, does variable 'Bg' contain buried within it a hidden true logarithmic nature, or is it somewhat empirical in that regard?
On another subject: I've noticed responses coming back pretty quickly at 9:48 in the morning. Putting this together with some remarks you guys have made I need to ask "Are we a bunch of old retired farts who ought to be sitting on the park bench feeding the pigeons?"
On another subject: I've noticed responses coming back pretty quickly at 9:48 in the morning. Putting this together with some remarks you guys have made I need to ask "Are we a bunch of old retired farts who ought to be sitting on the park bench feeding the pigeons?"
Ok. So here is a brewing sheet I made (adapted, I should say, from an in-progress sheet) that incorporates the mechanics of AJs troubleshooter and does away with all color based acidity calcs:
http://www.lowoxygenbrewing.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Brewing-Sheet-v1.1.xlsx
On another subject: I've noticed responses coming back pretty quickly at 9:48 in the morning. Putting this together with some remarks you guys have made I need to ask "Are we a bunch of old retired farts who ought to be sitting on the park bench feeding the pigeons?"