jack13
Well-Known Member
Hi All,
I'm trying to use Brewer's Friend's Water Chemistry Calculator (https://www.brewersfriend.com/water-chemistry/) to build Burton Upon Trent water. The calculator asks for the inital profile of the water (I use RO, so I just left all zeros for the minerals). You then select the desired profile (Burton on Trent was an option!), and it automatically fills in the amounts and displays the differences between your existing water and the desired water. EX: my RO water has 0 ppm Ca+ (I guess), and B-o-T has 270, hence I'm under by 270ppm.
The point then is to start entering amounts of brewing salts (chalk, gypsum, etc.) until the discrepancies are all within 20ppm.
My question is this: Is there a way to determine all the additions needed without doing trial and error like this? If the calculator 'knows' the solution, why doesn't it just tell me? Or are there so many "paths" to create a given profile that it CAN'T just tell me? I feel like I could spend all day trying different things and never get the right combination of salts to get me to the right profile. (Of course it wouldn't be trial and error if I was knowledable about water chemistry, but I'm not, so it is).
Related question: Is there another real simple calculator like this, but that allows me to specify which salts I have? I'm willing to purchase whatever, but I'd be curious to see how close I could get to a given desired profile with only what I have available (right now baking soda, gypsum, and CaCl).
I'm trying to use Brewer's Friend's Water Chemistry Calculator (https://www.brewersfriend.com/water-chemistry/) to build Burton Upon Trent water. The calculator asks for the inital profile of the water (I use RO, so I just left all zeros for the minerals). You then select the desired profile (Burton on Trent was an option!), and it automatically fills in the amounts and displays the differences between your existing water and the desired water. EX: my RO water has 0 ppm Ca+ (I guess), and B-o-T has 270, hence I'm under by 270ppm.
The point then is to start entering amounts of brewing salts (chalk, gypsum, etc.) until the discrepancies are all within 20ppm.
My question is this: Is there a way to determine all the additions needed without doing trial and error like this? If the calculator 'knows' the solution, why doesn't it just tell me? Or are there so many "paths" to create a given profile that it CAN'T just tell me? I feel like I could spend all day trying different things and never get the right combination of salts to get me to the right profile. (Of course it wouldn't be trial and error if I was knowledable about water chemistry, but I'm not, so it is).
Related question: Is there another real simple calculator like this, but that allows me to specify which salts I have? I'm willing to purchase whatever, but I'd be curious to see how close I could get to a given desired profile with only what I have available (right now baking soda, gypsum, and CaCl).