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Is this hydrometer......wrong?

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giuzep89

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What you're seeing in the picture is a reading taken with tap water. Does the reading look off to you? My impression is that the long line that should be indicating 1.000 is too low compared to the surface of the water. But then again, I don't trust how I'm looking at this, and I'd rather defer judgement to you. Opinions?

IMG_20250911_092254.jpg
 
That's a very confusing hydrometer marking.

But yes, it appears to be out of calibration. I guess the line under 1.000 is the 1.000 line, but those are some odd color coding and line choices.

edit: reading is typically at the bottom of the meniscus, or ~0.999 in this case. So you can add 0.001 to all readings and be pretty accurate.
 
What you're seeing in the picture is a reading taken with tap water. Does the reading look off to you? My impression is that the long line that should be indicating 1.000 is too low compared to the surface of the water. But then again, I don't trust how I'm looking at this, and I'd rather defer judgement to you. Opinions?

View attachment 884715
Use distilled water instead of tap and make sure it is a the proper calibration temperature. You should be able to find it on the hydrometer. Likely 68* F.
 
The way I read it is it's 1.003. It's messed up when experienced brewers read it differently...
Right. For me, it'd be 1.003 too.

The placing of the 1.000 is odd, but it seems clear to me that the yellow section is meant to indicate 1.000 to 1.010. But it's so bizarre how the numbers are located. For example, I would normally think that the place where the 10 is is 1.010, but it's not. It's the line ABOVE 10 that's 1.010, and the dash where the 10 is would be 1.012. Otherwise, it'd mean that the start of the dark section would be 1.008.

Yeah, very bizarre design. If the dashes really are located at the point of the number indicated, then the colors (white, yellow, black, etc.) almost seem intended to throw the person measuring the SG off.
 
The thing that has me thinking it's the line below is spacing to 0.990. Dashes work, too, now that I look. But either way, that makes the background color really bizarre.

In conclusion, I'm at 1.001 now, lol
 
The thing that has me thinking it's the line below is spacing to 0.990. Dashes work, too, now that I look. But either way, that makes the background color really bizarre.

In conclusion, I'm at 1.001 now, lol
The fact that we're even having a discussion about what the FG could be shows just how poorly designed it is. With most hydrometers, you might argue between whether it's 1.008 or 1.007, but you wouldn't argue about whether it's 0.999 or 1.003.
 
looks like .999 to me.

The only line that seems clearly defined is the .990 one, the 1.000 and 1.010 markings are unclear which line they pertain to. but if you take the .990 line and make the reasonable assumption that each smaller division is .002, and thus there are 5 of those between each .010 division, then that places the 1.000 line as the thin line beneath the 1.000 writing, which then lines up with the 1.010 line being the one beneath the '10'. If that's correct then that places the sample reading at 0.999

As someone else said, I'd check this with distilled water at the calibration temperature to confirm it's really slightly out.
 
I agree with @mashdar and get 1.001 which is fairly close to 1.000 for water assuming the temp of the sample is correct. However the fact that we are getting responses all over the board is concerning, but hey, Im sure once you get used to it, it becomes easier to read... does the rest of the hydrometer have weird colored markings like that or just right around 1.000? Obviously most beers won't finish that low so it may be a moot point for measuring the gravity of your beer. Of course thats assuming the reading is 1.001 and you're OK with that accuracy.
 
I agree with @mashdar and get 1.001 which is fairly close to 1.000 for water assuming the temp of the sample is correct. However the fact that we are getting responses all over the board is concerning, but hey, Im sure once you get used to it, it becomes easier to read... does the rest of the hydrometer have weird colored markings like that or just right around 1.000? Obviously most beers won't finish that low so it may be a moot point for measuring the gravity of your beer. Of course thats assuming the reading is 1.001 and you're OK with that accuracy.
The colored bits are yellow for "bottling", red for "start beer" and blue for "start wine". So utter nonsense hahah and don't really help anything
 
Haha, gotcha.. yeah I've had a colored one when I first started, it came in my beginners beer kit and used it for several years. I still have it but haven't used it in quite some time. I eventually got ones that are just black and white with simple to read clear markings. But to answer your original question, I wouldn't say its wrong. Maybe .001 off but thats easy enough to just add .001 to your measurements, also as mentioned above, distilled water would be the correct sample to check it with.
 
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