Here's why it is considered the norm to use distilled over tap water- consitency.
Believe it or not it tool me a LONG time to find the answer on the intertetz. Everyone talks about the importance of calibrating with distilled, but almost no-where does it explain why.
Everybody's water is going to be different, everyone's plumbing is going to be different, we know from brewing that different regions have water with different mineral content- Like Burton on trent for instance. Even boiling different waters aren't going to make them all the same.
The idea is that distilled water is going to be the most consistant due to the process of distillation.
It's going to be the most purest and free of minerals.
BUT if you start reading forums about fishtanks and such you'll see that the argument is not Tap water vs Distilled water, it's Calibration Fluid vs Distilled water.
This is an interesting article about even the difference between cali fluid and distilled;
Granted with fish it's life and death, and a few points difference in gravity of out beer isn't going to probably be all that different, even between tap and distilled...BUT hopefully now you can see why distilled is the hobby norm for calibration.
You basically want to zero out your test device, and you want to know it is zero, or whatever the calibration standard is. It's like check the accuracy of a scale in the old days with a standard weight set. You want to trust that a gram is really a gram, before you measure whatever is important to you.
Believe it or not it tool me a LONG time to find the answer on the intertetz. Everyone talks about the importance of calibrating with distilled, but almost no-where does it explain why.
Everybody's water is going to be different, everyone's plumbing is going to be different, we know from brewing that different regions have water with different mineral content- Like Burton on trent for instance. Even boiling different waters aren't going to make them all the same.
The idea is that distilled water is going to be the most consistant due to the process of distillation.
It's going to be the most purest and free of minerals.
Natural water usually contains a number of microscopic contaminants, along with dissolved minerals such as calcium and iron. One way to remove these elements from water is to boil it until it changes to steam, a process known as distillation. When this steam is allowed to cool down and condense into liquid form again, the result is a purified form called distilled water. Distilled water should ideally be nothing but hydrogen and oxygen molecules, with a PH level of 7 and no additional gases, minerals or contaminants.
The distilling process relies on the principle that most solid materials found in water are heavier than the water molecules themselves. When water is heated in a distiller, any dissolved solids such as salt, bacteria, calcium or iron remain solid while the pure water converts to a much lighter steam and is drawn out for condensation. Distilled water has a noticeably bland taste because all of the minerals which give water its flavor have been removed.
BUT if you start reading forums about fishtanks and such you'll see that the argument is not Tap water vs Distilled water, it's Calibration Fluid vs Distilled water.
In the case of a refractometer, the reference standard is generally a fluid that has been prepared or standardized on instrumentation that is traceable to a nationally or internationally recognized source; alternatively, it may be a fluid such as distilled water that has accepted physical properties. Traceability relates individual refractometer results through an unbroken chain of calibrations back to a national standard, a fundamental physical property, international standards, or a consensus standard. At MISCO, we provide traceability back to the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (“NIST”.
This is an interesting article about even the difference between cali fluid and distilled;
After doing a lot of research I came across endless debates online regarding zeroing a refractometer with ro/di water vs using calibration fluid. Both sides had good points: the scientific side said the only accurate measurement was with calibration fluid, and the general hobbyist side echoing what refractometer instructions say. Unfortunately it was the general hobbyist side that usually overwhelmed the debates, which made it seem like ro/di was the way to go. All I knew was that the refractometer was the only thing that had changed, and my tank was a disaster, so I decided it was time to test both sides of the argument.
I ordered this calibration fluid from Marine Depot, which was lab tested to make sure it was at nearly exactly 1.026. It wasn't easy seeing my tank go from bad to worse while I was waiting, fortunately though they're a local company and I had it the next day! I couldn't make it through my work day fast enough, my corals were dying and the cure might be sitting on my front porch.
When I finally got home I tore open the box and ran over to test the refractometer. As I peeked in my first reaction was, in all honesty, "wow, this calibration fluid is broken." It actually took me a few minutes to come to the realization they my calibration fluid was not broken. I'd figured the refractometer would be off by .001, maybe .002. Instead I was looking at a reading of 1.030. Was it true? Even after being zeroed out with distilled water like the instructions said, could it really have been reading .004 too high? Unfortunately, yes.
Granted with fish it's life and death, and a few points difference in gravity of out beer isn't going to probably be all that different, even between tap and distilled...BUT hopefully now you can see why distilled is the hobby norm for calibration.
You basically want to zero out your test device, and you want to know it is zero, or whatever the calibration standard is. It's like check the accuracy of a scale in the old days with a standard weight set. You want to trust that a gram is really a gram, before you measure whatever is important to you.