I'm guessing you don't know the strength of the copper sulfate you used?I have used copper sulfate, years ago. You only need a tiny amount. my method - dissolve a teaspoon in 100ml water, dissolve a teaspoon of that solution in 100ml water, use a teaspoon of that solution in 20L of cider
I appreciate you sharing but I'm still missing some details. You're starting with a "teaspoon" of what? Copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate powder/granules?H2S is detectable in very low concentrations, just a few parts per billion, so the amount of copper you need is really tiny. It is hard to measure such small amounts in homebrew volumes. You can be more scientific or use the commercial copper products, but my method works and won't add toxic or detectable amounts.
You're talking about the pentahydrate solid???copper sulfate is easier for me to get
Sorry, I don't have it anymore, I just remember buying blue granulated powder.You're talking about the pentahydrate solid???
Yeah, that was me.Advice i was given here concerning a "nuclear option" IIRC.
Sounds good, thanks. Almost all the comments I've read about using straight copper sulfate were negative, so you were one of the few using it correctly, apparently.I haven't used reduless, I'm sure it's a better solution, ha ha, but copper sulfate is easier for me to get, you asked for experiences. My method is just an easy way to deliver a very small amount of copper, you could start with half the amount if you want to be careful, if it doesn't work initially you can keep adding doses. I don't often get h2s problems.
Great info! Thank you!For option 2, my research indicates I have to reduce the compounds with ascorbic acid before being able to fix things with copper.