Home > Technical > Batteries and hydrometers |
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Paul_1978 Member Since: 08 Nov 2009 Location: South Yorkshire Posts: 384 |
I thought a Hydrometer measured the alcohol content of a fluid, weather its water or home brew.
To measure pH you need some small strips of test paper which turn a different colour for differnet pH's. |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:28am |
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party monkey Member Since: 31 Dec 2010 Location: Oxon. Posts: 1311 |
Yep, I've got a very simple Hydrometer to measure the specific gravity (density) of liquids...from this you can work out the alcohol content using a conversion table Is it Litmus paper for measuring Ph??? .... Although i think you can also buy a PH meter too. Sure I read that somewhere when I was trying to make cider from the bumper crop of apples we had last year Jon - 110 td5 [sold]. Currently Defenderless. Last edited by party monkey on 23rd Mar 2011 8:46am. Edited 1 time in total |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:37am |
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Paul_1978 Member Since: 08 Nov 2009 Location: South Yorkshire Posts: 384 |
Thats it, Litmus paper.
Goes red in acid, green for neutral and somet for alkaline, but the colour is read off on a chart which tells you the pH. |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:41am |
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party monkey Member Since: 31 Dec 2010 Location: Oxon. Posts: 1311 |
Blue for Alkaline I think.....
Weyhey.... I knew that chemistry A level would come in handy.... Only taken 22 years to find an application for it Jon - 110 td5 [sold]. Currently Defenderless. |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:46am |
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leeds Member Since: 28 Dec 2009 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 8581 |
Doooh yes hydrometer measures specific gravity.
So back to basic question can you use a hydrometer to measure specific gravity of the electrolyte in a gel or AGM battery? It is a long, long time since I did chemistry! Brendan |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:57am |
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party monkey Member Since: 31 Dec 2010 Location: Oxon. Posts: 1311 |
I don't see any reason why not....
BUT based on my limited experience of them.... the one I've got is cheap and cheerful and not terribly accurate (fine for home brew where you just want to get the SG to stabilise but thats about it). I'm guessing that you'd need something that would be able to monitor fairly small fluctuations in the SG during the battery charge/discharge cycle..... Sounds like a digital jobby to me.....but i've not got the first clue on them. Would Optima be able to help you out with a meter ? Jon - 110 td5 [sold]. Currently Defenderless. |
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23rd Mar 2011 9:27am |
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leeds Member Since: 28 Dec 2009 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 8581 |
I am used to density columns Slightly more accurate then the standard hydrometer but is aimed at solids. Basically measure a range of about 0.1 over a metre column
Am having a discussion with someone who says use a hydrometer on a sealed battery. I argue that a hydrometer is not suitable in a gel battery or a good AGM battery as there is no free electrolyte in liquid form to be sucked up into a hydrometer. Or have I made a basic mistake in either use of a hydrometer or the 'physical state' of electrolyte in a gel/AGM battery As for Optima batteries, there is a reason why we sell Odyssey batteries However that is a different story Brendan |
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23rd Mar 2011 9:48am |
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party monkey Member Since: 31 Dec 2010 Location: Oxon. Posts: 1311 |
Whoops Optima / Odessey - sorry, knew it began with an 'O' Have neither so can't comment
I see where you're coming from now with regard to the debate and must admit I didn't read your post properly so kinda skipped over gel/agm and just read electrolyte and the ability to measure the SG of the 'liquid' I can see that could be a problem in a gel battery, where don't they add something to thicken the electrolyte to a 'gel' but I thought an agm battery's electrolyte was still liquid... Sorry mate, I'm stumped - call Odessey Jon - 110 td5 [sold]. Currently Defenderless. |
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23rd Mar 2011 10:11am |
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leeds Member Since: 28 Dec 2009 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 8581 |
Odyssey says
Hence my argument in that you can not use a hydrometer to measure SG of the electrolyte in a AGM battery. However someone disagrees with me. (Yes I do at times get things wrong and misunderstand things) Am trying to understand if it is possible or wether the other person has got hold of the wrong end of the hydrometer. Me? I am old enough and daft enough to ask questions if I don't understand something Brendan PS Have used Optimas in the past, now all our Land Rovers have Odysseys fitted |
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23rd Mar 2011 10:21am |
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leeds Member Since: 28 Dec 2009 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 8581 |
Have spoken to a technical guy. When I explained the situation to him he just laughed and ask what drugs the guy was on!
Apparently if you split an Odyssey battery open, you will find all the lead plates in some 'wadding' which is virtually dry to the touch. i.e. no free acid and so hydrometer is of no use whatsoever in this case. Brendan |
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23rd Mar 2011 8:54pm |
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party monkey Member Since: 31 Dec 2010 Location: Oxon. Posts: 1311 |
So.... armed with this info....
Ask the guy to buy an Odessey batttery from you and then demostrate how it would work with a hydrometer. If he can prove it works... give him a free battery.. If he can't.... well .... he's just fooked his £200+ battery trying to prove the point. UNLESS of course he's a very GOOD customer, then I'd just tell him you spoke to technical. Jon - 110 td5 [sold]. Currently Defenderless. |
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23rd Mar 2011 10:31pm |
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