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| Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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Had a lengthy discussion with one of the reps at Labcor
http://www.labcor.com/index.asp here in Canada (Cole-Parmer in the U.S.). He "educated" me to understand that a low priced unit like http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356240 2 has a much wider margin for error than the +/- 0.2 published. Namely it's true accuracy is +/- 0.5 to 0.7. Hence a reading of 3.5 could literally range from 2.8 to 4.2. He said this is true for any pen-style meter regardless of make. Even a more expensive unit like this one http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356130 1 with an published accuracy of +/- 0.01 pH has a true margin of error of +/- 0.5. Just as useless as the first one. I was "sold" (almost) this unit http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356142 0 which apparently has a true margin of error of +/- 0.05. It's price is $360 Can. and replacement probes are $100 Can. Have I been "sold" (almost)? I think I remember reading some threads in this NG where winemakers were experiencing frustration with adjusting acidity. I.E. the taste outcomes from acidity adjustments where worse than the original unadjusted wine. Speculation: could this be because inexpensive (and grossly untrustworthy) meters are misleading us? Or ... Am I remember wrong to begin with? And ... Can a fairly inexpensive meter with a "published" accuracy of +/- 0.05 for example be trusted? It never occurred to me that a listed accuracy range may be suffering from a huge dose of optimism and literary licence. Now I'm really confused! Funny taste in my mouth, in Calgary, Jim |
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"glad heart" wrote in message om... Had a lengthy discussion with one of the reps at Labcor http://www.labcor.com/index.asp here in Canada (Cole-Parmer in the U.S.). He "educated" me to understand that a low priced unit like http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356240 2 has a much wider margin for error than the +/- 0.2 published. Namely it's true accuracy is +/- 0.5 to 0.7. Hence a reading of 3.5 could literally range from 2.8 to 4.2. He said this is true for any pen-style meter regardless of make. Even a more expensive unit like this one http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356130 1 with an published accuracy of +/- 0.01 pH has a true margin of error of +/- 0.5. Just as useless as the first one. I was "sold" (almost) this unit http://www.labcor.com/catalog/produc...&sel=356142 0 which apparently has a true margin of error of +/- 0.05. It's price is $360 Can. and replacement probes are $100 Can. Have I been "sold" (almost)? I think I remember reading some threads in this NG where winemakers were experiencing frustration with adjusting acidity. I.E. the taste outcomes from acidity adjustments where worse than the original unadjusted wine. Speculation: could this be because inexpensive (and grossly untrustworthy) meters are misleading us? Or ... Am I remember wrong to begin with? And ... Can a fairly inexpensive meter with a "published" accuracy of +/- 0.05 for example be trusted? It never occurred to me that a listed accuracy range may be suffering from a huge dose of optimism and literary licence. Now I'm really confused! Funny taste in my mouth, in Calgary, Jim Jim, many home winemakers believe the tart taste of juice or wine is directly related to pH. However, research suggests this is not the case. The tart taste of wine is more related to titratable acid (TA) and only indirectly related to pH. Perhaps this is why tasting the juice or wine seems more important than measuring either TA or pH. Margalit states in his book "Concepts in Wine Chemistry," page 299 " .............the major factor in acidity taste is the TA, and the pH is just a minor correction." Here are some other references: Amerine, M.A. et al. - Acids and acid taste; The effect of pH and titratable acid" - Am. J. Enol. Vit. 16 (1965) 29. Nagel, C.W. & McElvain, J.R. - "An analysis of the influence of pH and titratable acid in the scoring of wine" - Am. J. Enol. Vit. 28 (1977) 69. Noble, A.C. et al. - Comparison of sourness of organic anions at equal pH and equal titratable acids" - J. Sensory Studies 1 (1986) 1. |
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Thanks Lum. I always appreciate your perspective. Am I hearing a
recommendation to temper the analytical method and lean more on sensory perceptions? I'd like nothing more than to keep several hundred dollars in my pocket an not buy a pH meter. Yet, I struggle to get a meaningful fix on TA based on color change, especially for reds. I'm left guessing. At my current level my SQ (Sensory Quotient) is not well enough developed to serve me very well. So, I need some aids to give me a sense of what I have. I think a pH meter would help me but I need to be able to trust it's accuracy. Is there a trustworthy meter out there for less than $360 Can.? Cheers |
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Hi Jim;
I picked up a pH pen from Hoskins Scientific in Vancouver that I am very happy with. It is a model 98128 by Hanna, waterproof, reads to two places of the decimal and cost just over C$100. Stated accuracy is +/- 0.01 with an EMC (?) deviation of +/- 0.02 I don't know if it stays within the stated accuracy of +/- 0.02 or not but isn't that why we calibrate the instrument (?). A pH meter is basically a micro-ammeter. It can be checked/calibrated against a standard. I calibrate my pen at pH 4 and 7. If it then reads the pH 4 buffer accurately (+/- 0.02) I am satisfied that it will be accurate enough to read pH 3.4 which I try to keep my red musts at or below. If it reads the pH 7 buffer accurately (+/- 0.02) I am satisfied that a test for TA at pH 8.2 will be close enough - certainly more accurate than trying to eye-ball a colour change. The Hanna calibration is automatic - just dip it into the buffer and it adjusts itself. There is nothing that I have to physically adjust. I used to have a C$149. Corning pH pen. It was terrible... Did the Labcor rep work on commission ??? LOL !!! Hope this helps. Roger "glad heart" wrote in message m... Thanks Lum. I always appreciate your perspective. Am I hearing a recommendation to temper the analytical method and lean more on sensory perceptions? I'd like nothing more than to keep several hundred dollars in my pocket an not buy a pH meter. Yet, I struggle to get a meaningful fix on TA based on color change, especially for reds. I'm left guessing. At my current level my SQ (Sensory Quotient) is not well enough developed to serve me very well. So, I need some aids to give me a sense of what I have. I think a pH meter would help me but I need to be able to trust it's accuracy. Is there a trustworthy meter out there for less than $360 Can.? Cheers |
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"glad heart" wrote in message
m... Thanks Lum. I always appreciate your perspective. Am I hearing a recommendation to temper the analytical method and lean more on sensory perceptions? Jim, my approach to winemaking is measure, then taste, then measure, than taste. Of course, the other method of taste, then measure, then taste, then measure works pretty well too. Seriously, I think a reliable hydrometer and pH meter are indispensable for serious winemaking. I keep a saturated solution of distilled water and potassium bitartrate (buy cream of tarter at grocery store) next to my pH meter. A saturated solution has a pH of 3.56 at room temperature and I use it as a sanity check after I calibrate the meter. I'd like nothing more than to keep several hundred dollars in my pocket an not buy a pH meter. Yet, I struggle to get a meaningful fix on TA based on color change, especially for reds. I'm left guessing. At my current level my SQ (Sensory Quotient) is not well enough developed to serve me very well. So, I need some aids to give me a sense of what I have. I think a pH meter would help me but I need to be able to trust it's accuracy. Is there a trustworthy meter out there for less than $360 Can.? I really can't help you with selecting a pH meter. I am using an old (1973) Orion meter I purchased at a surplus store many years ago. I replace the probe about every two years. Regards, lum |
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Can a fairly inexpensive meter with a "published" accuracy of +/- 0.05
for example be trusted? It never occurred to me that a listed accuracy range may be suffering from a huge dose of optimism and literary licence. Rather than rely on the manufactures marketing collateral, why not test the meter against a solution of known strength? I have Hanna's digital PHEP 5 (80USD). It uses a two point calibration. I first calibrate with their 4.01 / 7.01 solutions, cycle power on the meter, then measure the *known strengths* of the calibration solutions. It consistently reads the calibration solutions +/- 0.05 after calibrating the meter. I'm not sure if you can then infer that the meter is accurate outside the 4-7 range (e.g. 3-4 for wine, 8.2 for titration), but I don't see why you couldn't. I'm sure someone will jump in if there is a problem with my logic ;-) Regards, Jody |
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Thanks for the comments everyone. The Labcor rep does NOT work for
commission and seemed very knowledgable on the subject which is why I let myself get quite confused. Surely a less expensive pH meter that's calibrated to control solutions should measure pH within an acceptable margin of error (near the listed margin of error). At least that's what reason and [hopefully] sound judgement tell me tonight. I'd much rather spend $80 US than 3 or 4 times that if I can count on accuracy. Jim |
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Lum,
I'd love to do a sanity check periodically too. How do you make up a saturated solution of potassium bitartrate (clearly I'm a non-chemist). Does it just mean adding cream of tarter until the solution will hold no more and it just falls to the bottom? Will this solution be good for a pH of 3.56 for some period of time? Thanks, Ed I keep a saturated solution of distilled water and potassium bitartrate (buy cream of tarter at grocery store) next to my pH meter. A saturated solution has a pH of 3.56 at room temperature and I use it as a sanity check after I calibrate the meter. |
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Sounds to me like he was doing a dirty and referring to the drift of an
uncelebrated pH meter. If you do not calibrate it, it can easily be off that much. If you calibrate it, it should be very close to the accuracy they advertise, assuming the electrode is good. I think he was playing loose with his comments. Ray "glad heart" wrote in message om... Thanks for the comments everyone. The Labcor rep does NOT work for commission and seemed very knowledgable on the subject which is why I let myself get quite confused. Surely a less expensive pH meter that's calibrated to control solutions should measure pH within an acceptable margin of error (near the listed margin of error). At least that's what reason and [hopefully] sound judgement tell me tonight. I'd much rather spend $80 US than 3 or 4 times that if I can count on accuracy. Jim |
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"Ed Marks" wrote in message ... Lum, I'd love to do a sanity check periodically too. How do you make up a saturated solution of potassium bitartrate (clearly I'm a non-chemist). Does it just mean adding cream of tarter until the solution will hold no more and it just falls to the bottom? Will this solution be good for a pH of 3.56 for some period of time? Thanks, Ed Ed, making a saturated solution of potassium bitartrate is easy. Just add enough powder until some is left on the bottom of the container. You know the solution is saturated as long as you can see crystals. My solutions seem to keep for several weeks. However, they do become moldy after a while and the pH is no longer 3.56. lum |
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Thanks for your help Lum.
Ed "Lum" wrote in message ... "Ed Marks" wrote in message ... Lum, I'd love to do a sanity check periodically too. How do you make up a saturated solution of potassium bitartrate (clearly I'm a non-chemist). Does it just mean adding cream of tarter until the solution will hold no more and it just falls to the bottom? Will this solution be good for a pH of 3.56 for some period of time? Thanks, Ed Ed, making a saturated solution of potassium bitartrate is easy. Just add enough powder until some is left on the bottom of the container. You know the solution is saturated as long as you can see crystals. My solutions seem to keep for several weeks. However, they do become moldy after a while and the pH is no longer 3.56. lum |
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I think Ray hit the nail on the head, my background is calibration and
the original premise seems odd. He may have also been talking about non temperature compensated probes but I don't know. I'm not saying he was making it up, I had a Checker and hated it, mine was gawd awful. Some have had good success with them though. I have the PHEP5 also and love it, but I do calibrate it each use. That is standard practice even with an expensive meter. I can check 5 points and the accuracy has never been worse than 0.05 from 3.00 to 10.00. I posted a pH meter FAQ a while back, you can find it with a Google search or I can repost. Regards, Joe If you do not calibrate it, it can easily be off that much. If you calibrate it, it should be very close to the accuracy they advertise, assuming the electrode is good. I think he was playing loose with his comments. |
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what are the proportions of the measurements that you use to arrive at the
3.56? I bought a used ph meter from ebay, a red hanna handheld for about 16. Would like to calibrate its accuracy, but don't have any 7.0 solution around... Thanks. Rick "Lum" wrote in message ... "glad heart" wrote in message m... Thanks Lum. I always appreciate your perspective. Am I hearing a recommendation to temper the analytical method and lean more on sensory perceptions? Jim, my approach to winemaking is measure, then taste, then measure, than taste. Of course, the other method of taste, then measure, then taste, then measure works pretty well too. Seriously, I think a reliable hydrometer and pH meter are indispensable for serious winemaking. I keep a saturated solution of distilled water and potassium bitartrate (buy cream of tarter at grocery store) next to my pH meter. A saturated solution has a pH of 3.56 at room temperature and I use it as a sanity check after I calibrate the meter. I'd like nothing more than to keep several hundred dollars in my pocket an not buy a pH meter. Yet, I struggle to get a meaningful fix on TA based on color change, especially for reds. I'm left guessing. At my current level my SQ (Sensory Quotient) is not well enough developed to serve me very well. So, I need some aids to give me a sense of what I have. I think a pH meter would help me but I need to be able to trust it's accuracy. Is there a trustworthy meter out there for less than $360 Can.? I really can't help you with selecting a pH meter. I am using an old (1973) Orion meter I purchased at a surplus store many years ago. I replace the probe about every two years. Regards, lum |
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"Rick Vanderwal" wrote in message ... what are the proportions of the measurements that you use to arrive at the 3.56? I bought a used ph meter from ebay, a red hanna handheld for about 16. Would like to calibrate its accuracy, but don't have any 7.0 solution around... Thanks. Rick Rick, Add potassium bitartrate crystals to distilled water until no more crystals will dissolve. The solution is saturated if you can see crystals on the bottom of the container after mixing well. lum Del Mar, CA |
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