With all due respect to everything that has been discussed, I'm going to try to take this back to the beginning for a second.
Obviously I have a misconception somewhere. But where?
This are my conceptions; one (or more) of them must be wrong:
1. A specific gravity reading is ratio between the density of liquid compared to the density of water (calibrated for a specific temp. but lets not bog ourselves down). Thus, for example, if a solution has an s.g. of 1.046 that means the solution is 1.046 times as dense as water.
True, for True Specific Density. (I'll explain later what I mean by that)
2. Density is mass/volume. Weight is measure of gravity on a mass and in this case can be considered synonamous with mass so density is (on earth at sea level) also a measurement of weight/volume.
Not quite, but this has been discussed to death. I won't go into it. Yet.
3. Thus: a gallon of something with an s.g. of 1.046 will be 1.046 times as heavy as a gallon of water.
Yes, except this is APPARENT specific gravity, which has to do with weight, and not densities. Again, it is of minor importance.
4. A gallon of water weighs 8 lbs so a gallon of something with an s.g of 1.046 will weigh 8.368 lbs.
Truth be told, THIS IS YOUR BIGGEST PROBLEM. Water is NOT 8 lbs/gal. At 70 Degrees F, water is 8.329 lbs/gallon. At 60 Deg F, it is 8.338 lbs/gallon.
Because WATER VOLUME IS TEMPERATURE DEPENDENT, it is highly important to know the temperature of the water. Now, for most measurements, at or near room temperature, I recommend using 8.33 (going one more decimal point assumes a level of confidence that you just won't have!) - which is pretty valid for everything between about 65 Deg F and 75 Deg F.
5. Soluable means disolves in water thus adding it to water will not increase the volume.
Not true. Discussed previously. Volume will slightly increase.
6. Sugar is soluable in water thus added a pound of sugar to a gallon of water will result is one gallon of solution.
The trick is to put a pound of sugar in a gallon container, then add water (mixing as it goes up) to get to 1 gallon. THEN you will have 1 gallon of SOLUTION.
7. Sugar has a diastatic power of 46 PPG which means adding 1 lb of sugar to one gallon of water will yield a solution with a s.g. of 1.046
As mentioned before, it's not "diastatic power" . . . that's a measure of enzyme activity in malts. It's simply the formula used to calculate the SG of the SOLUTION. 46 points per pound per gallon, where a "point" is .001 added to the SG.
8. Thus 1 lb of sugar added to a gallon of water will be one gallon in volume and thus weigh 8.368 lbs.
As was pointed out, this is incorrect. Technically, 1 lb sugar added to one gallon of water would, at 70 Deg F, weigh 9.33 lbs (mass is unchanging). However, what you want is the weight of 1 gallon of SOLUTION, which would be 8.33 * 1.046 = 8.71 lbs.
9. Adding a lb of sugar to a gallon of water causes no chemical of physical reaction that will result in any loss of mass or weight.
At least, not that you can detect in the volumes you're dealing with and with the equipment you have
10. 1 lb of sugar weighs a lb. A gallon of water weighs 8 lbs so mixing the two results in a solution weighing 9 lbs.
Not true, for all of the reasons discussed above.
11. 9 lbs is a different weight than 8.368 lbs
This is certainly true!
Which of my conceptions is wrong?
A few of them
