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Question re Priming

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tchamber

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Hi,

Quick question: Prior to bottling I measure the FG to calculate ABV, then add priming suger and bottle. Does the fermentation of the priming sugar during conditioning add significantly to the ABV?
 
Hi, from the calculation that I have got from a coopers English bitter kit, the priming sugar is taken into account when working it out.
 
No, unless you're taking your FG reading from the beer in bottles and not the beer in the fermenter, you're ABV calculation (which is approximate) doesn't consider the priming sugar. ABV=OG-FG*131.25
 
I´m pulling this out of my ars so be gentle: a pound of sugar in a five gallon batch it´s 8 gravity points, usully we add around 110 to 120 grams of sugar wich it´s aproximatly a quarter of a pound so 8 points/ 4: 2 gravity points added to the beer, 2 points * 131: 0.26 ABV.
I think
 
I´m pulling this out of my ars so be gentle: a pound of sugar in a five gallon batch it´s 8 gravity points, usully we add around 110 to 120 grams of sugar wich it´s aproximatly a quarter of a pound so 8 points/ 4: 2 gravity points added to the beer, 2 points * 131: 0.26 ABV.
I think

120 g is ~1/4 of a pound. I add around 3 or so ozs to a five gal batch, around 85 grams. Which would increase ABV by less than .2. Anyway, as was said earlier, priming sugar adds an insignificant amount of fermentable sugar, thus insignificantly, by roughly .2 or so %, increasing ABV.
 
120 g is ~1/4 of a pound. I add around 3 or so ozs to a five gal batch, around 85 grams. Which would increase ABV by less than .2. Anyway, as was said earlier, priming sugar adds an insignificant amount of fermentable sugar, thus insignificantly, by roughly .2 or so %, increasing ABV.

For most of us, this is probably less than the accuracy of the ABV calculation, too. I don't worry about it.
 
This is the calculation I use, it came with the coopers kits.

image-3028569871.jpg
 
This is the calculation I use, it came with the coopers kits.

View attachment 77410

That's the one I use,(OG-FG)/7.46 x .5 = ABV% Cooper's takes into account .5%,the other 7 formulas are about 2 or 3 percent. But all 8 formulas give a different answer. Flip a coin as to which seems right to your neurons...:tank:
 
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