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How the heck do I read this hydrometer?

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CafeRoaster

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Edit: I think I get it.

Bought this under recommendation from someone. But I don't think it works like normal hydrometers? How do I read this?


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I was thinking the same thing. I don't think I've ever been able to see a hydrometer reading that clearly.
100ml borosilicate glass measuring cylinder 30mm inside diameter works with 100ml of wort down to about 1.010, lower than that you need extra liquid to float it.
 
I just looked it up on Amazon. They had the glass cylinders available, but all of them had volume markings on them. I'd love to find ones like the OP pictured.
(Sorry to do a little hijack of the thread, CafeRoaster)
 
I have this one...
Glass Hydrometer Test Tube Jar & Cylinder Brush - Narrow Flask for Alcohol by Volume Test - Moonshine, Homebrew Beer, Home Wine Making Kits, Borosilicate Glass 3.3 https://a.co/d/itkcXp7
I like the Protective Safety Ring concept and the brush is a nice touch too.
Have you knocked it over to see if the ring saves the vessel?
 
I like the Protective Safety Ring concept and the brush is a nice touch too.
Have you knocked it over to see if the ring saves the vessel?

I think we need an Exbeeriment to knock over various brands of glass hydrometer jars and see which ones survive. Maybe enlist someone's cat to do the knocking over.
 
As my eyes age faster than I do, I find it harder and harder to read hydrometers. I all but stopped taking readings. I did find precision hydrometer that only has gravity and the scale range is only 1.000 - 1.070 making it way easier to read. I would include a link, but I bought it from Northern Brewer years ago and they don't seem to have it anymore.

Here's the standard triple scale vs the precision hydrometer.

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I did find precision hydrometer that only has gravity and the scale range is only 1.000 - 1.070 making it way easier to read. I would include a link, but I bought it from Northern Brewer years ago and they don't seem to have it anymore.
I searched a number of stores about a month ago for a hydrometer in the 0.980 - 1.020 range (easy measurement of FG with about 4 oz of wort). Finally found one at FH Steinbart (next day order fulfillment and flawless delivery).

They also stock a hydrometer in the 1.000 - 1.070 range.
 
FWIW: I loaded the two images into new tabs (Firefox, Windows 10 Laptop) and zoomed to 500%. (aside: phone camera could do something similar when taking the measurement).
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I agree with 1.053. It's not where the liquid touches the glass, it the level of the liquid. Water tension creeps up the side making it look like 1.052
 
I have broken almost as many glass graduated cylinders as hydrometers. It is a little harder to read but my plastic one hasn’t broken yet…
Believe it or not, I dropped one onto a concrete garage floor and the darn thing cracked!

Oddly enough, my glass hydrometer was inside it at the time, in its protective plastic tube with paper stuffed at the heavy end and the reading end wrapped in the instructions, and it survived unscathed.
 
According to all the unboxing / how-to videos, an important first step is to throw away the instructions. Fortunately for me the instructions for my older French-made tri-scale hydrometer are printed right on the scale inside. It's a bit of an odd duck in some ways that make it easier to use. It is calibrated to read at the top of the meniscus and 20C / 68F (which happens to be the average temperature of my basement laundry brew room). I've never quite figured out why most hydrometers use 60F.

The one major drawback to that French hydrometer is a very scrunched scale, so I recently bought that tall American made hydrometer with the one digit increments mentioned above. I quickly found out that I also needed to purchase the matching tall glass cylinder in order for it to work. I'm relearning how to read at the bottom of the meniscus, but the expanded scale is very nice. After getting left gathering dust on the shelf, my old plastic cylinder decided to jump to the floor in a fit of jealousy and cracked.
 
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