krazypara3165 wrote:...I am looking for 23l of wort is there anyone that could point me to the right direction?
Welcome to the forum krazy

. I think I can probably help you here.
The first thing to get your head around in home brewing is that on the 'numbers' side of things, there is a lot of garbage information floating around. Let's see if the following makes some sense....
If someone put out a sign in front of their petrol station which said, "Buy my petrol and you will all be able to drive exactly 500 kms before you run out of fuel," what would you think?
A small car with a small engine is obviously going to go a lot further than a V8 given the same amount of fuel. Also, if both cars will be heading downhill, they will both get a lot further than if heading uphill.
Most recipes on the internet, even given by 'experienced' brewers, ignore your local terrain and the car you drive. They just assume that you drive the same car as them and live in the same terrain.
...
In this scenario, there are several problems. Dennis might be an experienced brewer but that doesn't mean he can teach you how to drive.
For example, he hasn't really told you how far he drove on that 5kg of fuel. He sort of says he drove 23 kms litres but we can't know if that was uphill or downhill and if he waited at any or a lot of traffic lights or even if he used high or low octane fuel. The information is simply not there.
...
The above deals with grain. We now need to move to hops. Dennis has written that he used 15 grams of Galaxy hops at 90 minutes.
If I asked you to throw in 15 garlics (the whole bulb) into a cooking recipe, wouldn't you ask me, "Do you mean weak or really potent garlic bulbs?" It's exactly the same with hops. This year we might have a very weak crop and the next year might be very potent. Weight alone means nothing.
That last paragraph is actually a gross oversimplification as we don't really even know the 'true' volume (Volume of Ambient Wort) that the 'garlic was applied to.
So, re-consider Dennis

.
...
When you mention that you can't get your head around the BIABacus, in some ways that is good and in some ways bad. It's good in the way that the BIABacus is the only program that will make you stop and ask the right questions whihc you have done

. But it is bad because the help for the BIABacus has not yet been written

.
For example, your last question about your 33 litre Burco and you wanting to be able to get 23 litres of wort is a great one that the BIABacus can answer. No other program can do it. This question is like me saying to you, "Someone has given me 10 litres of fuel and I will be driving to Whereverland."
The real question, and what Dennis and most other software do not ask is, "Where do you want to go and is it uphill or downhill?" These are the proper questions. Ask them and then we can tell you how much fuel you will need to get there.
Also study
this thread. Dennis is not alone.
And welcome to the forum

,
PP
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