Silver_Is_Money
Larry Sayre, Developer of 'Mash Made Easy'
Ok that makes more sense, so your saying calcium plus magnesium plus sodium has to equal the amounts of chloride and sulfate? And you can predict this based off the alkalinity and hardness? Sorry i dont remember anything from high school chemistry. Lol. So basically my water is pretty soft and could probably be used for a light lager or something only by removing the chlorine?
On strictly a mEq/L basis waters cations must equal anions. mEq/L (milliequivalents per liter) is not the same thing as ppm (mg/L).
mEq = milliequivalent = (milligrams/molecular weight) x valence
mEq/L = the number of milliequivalents present within 1 Liter of water
Ca+2, Mg+2, and Na+ are cations
SO4-2, Cl-, and alkalinity are anions