Smiling Frog
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You're previous post only talks about refractometer readings, not specific gravity readings, as quoted in post #47.See previous post.
You're previous post only talks about refractometer readings, not specific gravity readings, as quoted in post #47.See previous post.
...and we know the effects of sugar and alcohol on the density of liquids. If we have our numbers we can calculate changes.
If you want to bang your heads against the wall, by all means.
You take alcohol away, you then have a new FG to calculate with.
It's that simple.
I could understand this being difficult if the OG was unknown.
And a refractometer would work as well.
No, as @Vale explained pretty clearly in post #52.
That's why I stated a % calculation.
Measure the volume (weighing) would be more accurate.
Take original % BY VOLUME, and calculate the change.
ABV is % alcohol diluted in beer. As you take it away density changes, but so does volume. Calculate the % loss.
But frankly it's going to be so small it's negligible.
[Graph connecting the deviation alcohol creates in a sugar solution density measured by refraction index]
rushpapers, where did this graph come from? Is there a way I can get the original paper?{attachment removed}
rushpapers, where did this graph come from? Is there a way I can get the original paper?
"attachment"
This is likely to the way to a better determination of the alcohol content (likely better than the [OG-FG] method). A couple of problems, however. One, in step b), remember that the refractometer does not measure density. You cannot "measure the density by the refractometer."This is actually interesting and, thinking about it, it might be possible to:
a) Measure the density by the hydrometer;
b) Measure the density by the refractometer;
c) Knowing the real density, and observing the deviation between refractomer and hydrometer, one can infer how much alcohol there is because the deviation is due to the alcohol, and the more the deviation, the more the alcohol.
This might be the right solution to the OP problem.
This is actually interesting and, thinking about it, it might be possible to:
This is likely to the way to a better determination of the alcohol content (likely better than the [OG-FG] method). A couple of problems, however. One, in step b), remember that the refractometer does not measure density. You cannot "measure the density by the refractometer."
I know. It should have read as "read the apparent density by the refractometer". The refractometer applies an internal look-up table to convert RI to the density of a syrup.
One of my major complaints about the cheap hand-held Brix refractometers on the market is not that they are of poor quality or that they are not accurate, but they do not give you a reading of the property they are measuring. They measure the refractive index but give you a reading of % sucrose (or even more egregiously, a density reading).
You can determine the RI by using the look-up table in the other direction.
I would change/redefine your method to:
a) Measure the density of the beer with the hydrometer to get an estimate of the % sugars present in the final beer
b) Measure the refractive index of the beer
c) Assuming the two major factors that affect the refractive index of the beer are the sugar content and the alcohol content, if the sugar content is known, the alcohol content should be able to be estimated.
Besides the "recalling" of my method, I think a) has a problem, that the % sugars present in the final beer is not entirely knowable even by a hydrometer reading, because the alcohol present is skewing (lowering) the density thus bringing to an underestimation of the sugar in the beer.
I don't have the time to work it out for you in text, but it's not that hard.
You need to realize these are calculations, laws and constants. You can do this.
You don't need a fancy $2000 tool.
To the OP it matters a lot since he plans to de-alcoholize his beers and needs a way to determine wether he was succesful or not. The fact that you don't care about ABV does not really help him.Both hydrometers and refractometers are inaccurate for FG readings. But what does it matter ?
well i just performed an experiement....i poured a glasses worth of beer in a sauce pot and put it in the oven for 45 minutes at 170f....
it was a known beer of OG 1.066, FG of 1.003....Brix for it before the oven 7 or so....brix after then oven 6...and the hydrometer reading after the oven was 1.012....so 45 minutes in the oven took it from a bit over 8% to about 4%......
What formula did you use to determine this? As far as I know, nobody has derived one yet. And the standard hydrometer/refractometer formulae will not work for this, for reasons already discussed ad nauseum.
i used the one in beersmith....Tools/Refractometer/Original Gravity.....
it worked for a beer i double checked it with....and when i diluted a know amount of known 65% whisky in a measured amount of water...i think it works pretty good....
That's a different problem, uncomplicated by the presence of unfermented dextrins/sugars that the standard formulae work for in a normal fermentation, but not when alcohol is removed without replacing extract.
When you remove alcohol (and change nothing else), the refractometer reading decreases.