BrewnWKopperKat
(Ο_Ο)
Without the details (e.g. the revised recipe), it's hard to accurately detect and troubleshoot FG issues.I've never gotten into the details of my end result over the years of extract brewing.
Without the details (e.g. the revised recipe), it's hard to accurately detect and troubleshoot FG issues.I've never gotten into the details of my end result over the years of extract brewing.
OrIf the recipe was for 1.053 at 5 gallons and you add one extra pound of malt extract (assuming dry malt extract since it usually comes in 1LB increments), that should only raise the gravity by (1.044 / 5 = 1.008) or an OG of 1.061. If you measured higher than that:
1. Your instrument is out of calibration.
2. Your wort was stratified and you pulled a denser sample than the average of the entire batch.
3. Your total volume was lower than 5 gallons.
4. Any combination of the above.
If the recipe was for 1.053 at 5 gallons and you add one extra pound of malt extract (assuming dry malt extract since it usually comes in 1LB increments), that should only raise the gravity by (1.044 / 5 = 1.008) or an OG of 1.061. If you measured higher than that:
1. Your instrument is out of calibration.
2. Your wort was stratified and you pulled a denser sample than the average of the entire batch.
3. Your total volume was lower than 5 gallons.
4. Any combination of the above.
Anecdote as a homebrew store owner for 10 years.
Customer on the phone: "I have a stuck fermentation".
Me: Is the fermenter a white plastic bucket?
Customer: Yes
Me: How do you know it's stuck?
Customer: The airlock isn't bubbling
Me: The lid seal is leaking.
That conversation is about 75% of all "stuck fermentation" calls.
The other 25% is:
Customer on the phone: "I have a stuck fermentation".
Me: How do you know it's stuck?
Customer: I measured the gravity and it's really still high.
Me: Refractometer?
Customer: How did you know?
There is a small subset of the above where the customer is actually using a triple scale hydrometer but they read the potential alcohol scale after fermentation.
What's your point? Looking for advice not criticism. I already stated what I was using.Anecdote as a homebrew store owner for 10 years.
Customer on the phone: "I have a stuck fermentation".
Me: Is the fermenter a white plastic bucket?
Customer: Yes
Me: How do you know it's stuck?
Customer: The airlock isn't bubbling
Me: The lid seal is leaking.
That conversation is about 75% of all "stuck fermentation" calls.
The other 25% is:
Customer on the phone: "I have a stuck fermentation".
Me: How do you know it's stuck?
Customer: I measured the gravity and it's really still high.
Me: Refractometer?
Customer: How did you know?
There is a small subset of the above where the customer is actually using a triple scale hydrometer but they read the potential alcohol scale after fermentation.
I tested prior to dumping in fermemter & was probably 3.5-4 gallons before transfer.
the original recipe of 1.053 OG but I added 1 lb of malt
It took 37 replies to get to incorrect OG (measured before top off) and FG (measured using the SG scale on a refractometer).Looking for advice not criticism
A solution for your FG reading was suggested in #3, but you didn't actually apply it until #13. The original gravity issue wasn't fully addressed until #37. Your original specific gravity was not 1.085 and your ABV is not 10.4%.The sg reading was resolved in #3
Unless you know exactly what the volume was when you measured the SG and exactly how much water you added, you really can't correctly account for the dilution. If you did know that the volume was exactly 3.64 gallons and the wort was well mixed when you measured the SG at 1.085 and you topped off to exactly 5.0 gallons, then accounting for the dilution is simple arithmetic as in #37. So (again) if you really had 3.64 gallons at 1.085 and you topped off to exactly 5 gallons then (85*3.64)/5=61.88 so your actual OG was 1.062. And if your final gravity really is 1.007, then your ABV is about 7.2%.So, using a refractometer calculator expressed above (#3) how would I account for the dilution?
I wasn't criticizing you in that post but I will now. Take this as constructive criticism. If you get defensive, you'll learn nothing. If you have all the answers, don't ask any questions.What's your point? Looking for advice not criticism. I already stated what I was using.
3. That could've been possible since I tested prior to dumping in fermemter & was probably 3.5-4 gallons before transfer.