They doing any (oil) Fracking in your neck of the woods! Thats pretty low, but not all that uncommon really. Do you have some distilled water to try and see what it reads just to see if it comes in closer to 7?
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One thing don’t bother testing distilled water ph since it does not have any ions for the PH Meter to work with.
Whether it is dissolved Co2, the lack of Ions, or the ability of type of probe, there is no value in using distilled water to check the calibration of a PH Meter. It seems the problem is greater than just carbonic acid.Freshly distilled water should have a pH of 7.0. However, interaction with the atmosphere allows carbon dioxide to dissolve into it, forming carbonic acid. As a result, agitating the water or allowing it to sit for a while will leave you with an aqueous solution that drifts down in pH. Because there are no natural buffers in distilled water, the pH can go down as low as 5.0.
As far as Calibration goes it makes no sense to think you are accomplishing anything worthwhile calibrating with distilled water attempting to come to a conclusion of calibration at zero brix. First, inexpensive hydrometers are not always accurate. But even if they are, a reading at zero brix in distilled water is a waste of time (1). The reading and calibration you want is at 25 brix (2). That is where most of the errors show up. And for the reasons stated above a reading of 23 or 25 may change a winemaker’s decision whether to add water or add sugar. That is why testing and determining a calibrating factor for your hydrometer at 25 Brix is what you need to do especially when using the garden variety hydrometer.
There are two ways to calibrate your hydrometer. One is to buy a Laboratory Standard Calibrated Hydrometer (about 50 dollars) (3) and use that against your other inexpensive one and determine a plus or minus factor to use prior to fermentation. This way you can keep your Lab Standard Hydrometer safe and use the inexpensive one. The other way is to purchase 25 brix lab standard solution. Then you can determine the error at 25 brix in your hydrometer and record a correction factor to use.
If you want proof then that is very easy test 3 inexpensive hydrometers at O brix and then at 25 brix. The major differences occur at the top of the scale not at the bottom. And those errors are more significant to the winemaker when making amelioration or chaptalization decisions. Documentation is sometimes the best when you discover it for yourself.
Skin a cat anyway you wish but what is really important to the wine maker is using the accuracy of the reading at the beginning of the fermentation. What difference does it really make at 0 or minus 1 or 2 when that reading is more effected by Alcohol Content than actual remaining sugar content. What is important at the beginning is Sugar Content.
Why bother calibrating at zero with distilled water when you really are interested in the calibration at 25 Brix when it matters. It seems pretty obvious your are calibrating at the wrong end of the scale in any case.
As to your question the answer is no. They are off much more at 25 brix than at zero. And Manufactures take the easy route here and tell you to test at Zero. As far as customers are concerned, many here, have never heard of a Lab Standard Calibrated Hydrometer or for that matter 25 Brix lab standard solution used primarily to adjust Refractometers.
If we used your argument why not adjust your Refractometer with distilled water. It doesn't work that way. That's why.
I'll skin a cat while it's still screaming if i feel like it, have you no fear in that.
You stress the importance of the accuracy in the initial reading, but downplay the importance of a final reading. Hydrometers measure more than just the sugar in the solution - which im sure we both know because you've also pointed out. So the accuracy you stress in the beginning, is theoretically thrown off just like your final readings, albeit by a different cause.
Alcohol content, however, affects a hydrometer reading in the opposite way than the sugar content would because alcohol is less dense than water - this would make it sink farther & read a lower number (This opposite-reaction could possibly negate some/all of the inaccuracy in a hydrometer, but that's only theoretical and not something we could readily test). While, obviously, sugar would be adding more TDS to the liquid therefor making it more dense - raising the hydrometer.
Honestly, you've left me scratching my head here. Obviously its not very obvious, or we wouldn't be having this conversation would we?
So then you're saying the inaccuracy at 0Brix is compounded when you reach 25Brix. By what degree, who knows.. But compounded nonetheless.
If you dont use distilled water, what do you use? I could see an argument for 2-point calibration (distilled water & 25Brix) over a single-point... But lemme guess, you only use a 25 Brix solution for your refractometer too?
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