petrolSpice
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- Dec 31, 2013
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Anyone do this? This seems like a more accurate method than marks on the kettle or height of the liquid. This is because the weight is not affected by temperature, whereas the height of the liquid is. Also if the kettle isn't level this will also throw off the height.
So if you know the weight of kettle plus wort, subtract out the kettle weight, divide by the SG, then divide by the density of water (at room temp), this should work, right? You will get a volume referenced to room temperature which at the end of the brew day is what we care about, the volume that goes into the fermenter.
I have a postage scale that goes up to 85 lb.and I think it's fairly accurate. Even if it's +/- 1lb that would be +/- 1/8 gallon roughly.
I know this is getting into the weeds but I'm really trying to dial in my process, not just increase accuracy.
So if you know the weight of kettle plus wort, subtract out the kettle weight, divide by the SG, then divide by the density of water (at room temp), this should work, right? You will get a volume referenced to room temperature which at the end of the brew day is what we care about, the volume that goes into the fermenter.
I have a postage scale that goes up to 85 lb.and I think it's fairly accurate. Even if it's +/- 1lb that would be +/- 1/8 gallon roughly.
I know this is getting into the weeds but I'm really trying to dial in my process, not just increase accuracy.