Half-baked
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 9/10/17
- Messages
- 229
- Reaction score
- 98
Hi William,
First thing is, don’t worry too much, a pacific ale with an OG of 1.044 is fine. You won’t taste a few points difference.
Can you just confirm your volumes? That’s 29l pre-boil (immediately before/just as it starts to boil?) and 23l into the fermenter, what was the post-boil value?
If there’s no measurement error, then your post-boil volume would be 28.3l, i.e. a boil off of 0.7l over 70 min!
So it would be fairly safe to say there is some form of measurement error.
First, are you comfortable your volume markings are correct? Get out a measuring tape, and punch in the radius and height into an online calculator to confirm.
Second, maybe try to find some YouTube videos of best practice for taking gravity readings. There’s actually a surprising amount that can go wrong, and it took me quite a while to get to the point I was confident (enough) with my readings.
There are good points above about wort stratification, temperature, calibration and settling out the trub/break material. All of these need to be spot on for the gravity reading to be correct…
First thing is, don’t worry too much, a pacific ale with an OG of 1.044 is fine. You won’t taste a few points difference.
Can you just confirm your volumes? That’s 29l pre-boil (immediately before/just as it starts to boil?) and 23l into the fermenter, what was the post-boil value?
If there’s no measurement error, then your post-boil volume would be 28.3l, i.e. a boil off of 0.7l over 70 min!
So it would be fairly safe to say there is some form of measurement error.
First, are you comfortable your volume markings are correct? Get out a measuring tape, and punch in the radius and height into an online calculator to confirm.
Second, maybe try to find some YouTube videos of best practice for taking gravity readings. There’s actually a surprising amount that can go wrong, and it took me quite a while to get to the point I was confident (enough) with my readings.
There are good points above about wort stratification, temperature, calibration and settling out the trub/break material. All of these need to be spot on for the gravity reading to be correct…