HB_ATL73
Well-Known Member
Appreciate the conversation on the calculations- helps a lot
I misread that part, no offense intended. My visions bad enough that I always struggled reading the triple scales. I finally broke down and bought the narrow range hydrometers, just so I can read them easier.Third batch- not even close... 3rd BIAB yes. Also, yes triple scale cheap hydrometer- so given the calculations I'm sure it would be easy to miss .001-.002 points
That's all assuming that the hydrometer is calibrated properly (triple-scale or narrow-range).Went back and re-read.
In the end the difference is so small that the whole exercise is just a math problem to solve.
IMO, the difference is well within the margin of error of just READING the hydrometer. Unless of course you have a very accurate narrow range hydrometer.
I misread that part, no offense intended. My visions bad enough that I always struggled reading the triple scales. I finally broke down and bought the narrow range hydrometers, just so I can read them easier.
Agreed, I had a nice set from Northern Brewer, but after 6 years I broke my mid-range that I used all the time (1.000-1.060) that had .0005 graduations. I still struggle a bit, but if I squint hard enough I can count the little lines. I was always told getting old would suck...I just didn't know it was going to be this soon.Love my 1.040 max bottling hydrometer and narrower range OG hydrometer (can't remember the range now). I still hve trouble reading them tho.
I misread that part, no offense intended. My visions bad enough that I always struggled reading the triple scales. I finally broke down and bought the narrow range hydrometers, just so I can read them easier.
I can see if you are looking for the total from the start of each step = 1.082----- math.. not an actual number that you could measure with a hydrometer.
I broke my middle range 1.000-1.070 one after 6 years. I was looking for a direct replacement and could only find them from lab suppliers who were charging $50+ ea. Luckily found the 1.000-1.100o unit at Williams as well. It's been a sigh of relief to put the triple scale back into storage.I started having to use readers at about 35 and that was 25 years ago.
I have both the Williamsbrewing ones, "bottling" .0005 marks, 1.000-1.040; and "narrow range" 1.000-1.100, awesome.
I broke my middle range 1.000-1.070 one after 6 years. I was looking for a direct replacement and could only find them from lab suppliers who were charging $50+ ea. Luckily found the 1.000-1.100o unit at Williams as well. It's been a sigh of relief to put the triple scale back into storage.