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Alcohol %

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found this on wikipedia explains some things.....

For a given alcoholic beverage, there are two types of gravity measurements, taken before and after fermentation:

Original gravity (OG), which is a measure of the specific gravity of an unfermented beverage. (OG is the "sugar before fermentation" measurement.)
Final gravity (FG), sometimes called Terminal Gravity, which is a measure of the specific gravity of the fermented beverage. (FG is the "sugar after fermentation" measurement.) Typically, FG is measured only once fermentation is completely finished - that is, all of the fermentable sugars have been turned into ethanol.
The difference between OG and FG is a measure of the amount of sugar consumed in the fermentation, and therefore it can be used as a rough, indirect measurement of the alcohol content of the beverage. It is a "rough" measurement of alcohol content for several reasons:

Each yeast has a certain power of attenuation, which is the ability to consume sugars down to trace amounts.
Different beverages have higher or lower proportions of non-fermentable sugars (trisaccharides and longer polysaccharides).
Thus, final gravity is not a simple function of original gravity - that is to say, FG cannot be accurately calculated from OG. However, it is nonetheless a common practice to "design" a beverage based on the theoretical final gravity. This is done by summing the GU/lb of the beverage's various starting materials and dividing by the volume of liquid being fermented. This gives the expected final gravity, but is rarely, if ever, an accurate calculation of actual final gravity. (For example, dry malt extract has approximately 45 GU/lb. If five pounds are used to make two gallons, you have: 45GU/lb x 5lb = 225GU ; 225GU / 2gal = 112.5 GU per gallon, yielding a product with a gravity of 1.1125.)
 
You can buy a proofing hydrometer. This will measure the alcohol % not the alcohol potential. This is mostly used for whiskey and the like but it should work for your brew, not positive so you may want to check up on it before spending cash on it.

Proofing hydrometers do not work in beer. The assumption when using a proofing hydrometer is that the liquid contains not sugar, only alcohol and water. Beer nearly always contains significant residual sugars.

Craig
 
Since this thread got bumped....

The correct way to measure alcohol content in beer is gas chromatography. If you do not have a gas chromatograph, you can estimate.

All of the estimations given in this thread assume that alcohol content is a linear function of the change in apparent extract. This will be accurate at one particular alcohol content and less accurate the further you get away from that point. I suspect that some of the approximations I see suggested were developed for wine and work poorly for beer.

The best approximation I have seen was published on HBD by George Fix. I have posted it here a few times so the enterprising google searcher will be able to find it somewhere. It involves first approximating real extract and then using that in a fairly good approximation of ABW.
 
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