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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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I work in a lab and we have 4 ph meters of different varieties we also have
cupboard full of ph strips and nitrate strips. But what ph does my wine need to be :-( lol. Also do you people calibrate you ph meters because they drit out alot we do 5 point calibrations on ours ever morning. Even our top rig whic is acurate to .001 and compensates for temperature to .01 of a degree drifts out of claibration by the end of the day. Have wine makeing "Mark Willstatter" > wrote in message om... > (gus) wrote in message . com>... > > "LEE WEISS" > wrote in message >.. . > > > Plus you can measure the actual pH of the wine. Bonus. > > > There is a procedure to follow for titrating when the pH meter goes to 8.2, > > > > I currently use a pH meter to check my t.t.a. also. But the blue > > solution bottle says to take the reading when the pH = 7.0. I never > > questioned it because I thought that 7.0 was the neutral reading. > > > > Should I be taking the reading at 8.2, and if so "Why"? > > > > Thanks, > > Gus Calandrino > > The only real reason titration is done to pH 8.2 is that the > conventional endpoint for titration is to look for color change using > phenolphthalein as an indicator solution, which happens at pH 8.2. pH > 7.0 would probably make more sense but TA is defined that way, at > least in the US. As a purely practical matter, you probably won't > observe a huge difference between using pH 7.0 and 8.2 as an endpoint; > since pH is a logarithmic scale, it takes roughly 10x more NaOH to get > you from pH 3 to 4 than it does from 4 to 5, ten times more from 4 to > 5 than 5 to 6 and so forth. In other words, it will take the vast > majority of the NaOH you add during titration to get you from pH 3.5 > to 7.0 and a tiny amount to go from 7.0 to 8.2, probably not enough to > significantly affect your titration result. > > - Mark W. |
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