Hi there laserghost

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Excuse the long read below. I think you are the sort of bloke that will read it though and it may help you better understand some of the main problems in recipe scaling. Not an easy thing to get your head around unfortunately

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Here's a few random thoughts and then we'll take a look at your recipe...
Some History
1. In BS, it is quite easy to scale a recipe incorrectly and get a wrong answer unfortunately. Have a wade through the
Beersmith2 Guide for BIABrewers to make sure you are scaling using the right method.
2. BS intends brewers to make their 'Brewhouse Efficiency' their efficiency into fermentor and their batch size as being what they get into the fermentor. This is a confusing way to go around things. In addition to this, as the hop formulas in BeerSmith1 were incorrect, so many brewers started to set their 'Brewhouse Efficiency' as their efficiency into kettle and their 'batch size' as 'end of boil volume'. (The current BS2 hop formulas still has one of the original errors but the volume one has been fixed now).
3. The most important volume figure of interest when scaling a recipe is the 'End of Boil Volume'. So, the problem is, when you see a BeerSmith recipe report, you can't really scale the recipe properly as you have no idea whether the author means by 'batch size' their EOBV or their volume into fermentor and these two can be significantly different.
4. All the above problems could be solved if the recipe report displayed 'Losses to Trub and Ckiller" (kettle trub). If this said zero, then we'd know the author was using EOBV as their batch size. If it said anything else we'd know they meant VIF and we would add the trub losses to this and scale away.
BS2 now has 2 of the reports that show kettle trub which is a start.
(Just quickly on your disparity with the base grain as compared to other grains, BS has probably tried to keep the colour the same which is not a great way to go. Specialty grains are primarily flavour grains so altering their ratio to maintain colour is something I don't think is correct. On top of this, colour formulas are not very good at predicting the end result - they are only a vague guide.) )
Why End of Boil Volume is so Important
The end of boil is the point at which the brew basically becomes finalised. (Ignore post-boil top-ups and hop additions in this example.) Let's say at this point your brew is 20 L and has an OG of 1.050 and a bitterness of 20 IBU's. If you lose 5 L (an extreme example) to kettle trub, what you get in the fermentor will still be 1.050 and 20 IBU's.
Imagine if you sent me this recipe and accidentally told me that your EOBV was 15L. I would end up scaling your recipe and coming up with a totally incorrect result. My beer would end up being around 1.067 and my IBU's would be about 27 - no where near right!!!
Nearly all the problems with recipe scaling in this thread come down to trying to 'guess' what the end of boil volume was in the original recipe.
Your Recipe
You've done a nice job there laserghost. All the grains are fine. The calculator scales the grains according to their ratios and what OG you need so EOBV of the original recipe is not needed here.
The calculator does need EOBV of the original recipe to calculate hops correctly and unfortunately we don't know what this is in your case. Is it 5.5 gallons? Or is it 5.5 gallons plus kettle trub?
Here's where we get into having to become a recipe detective and this is not as simple as you think as so many programs have errors in their basic calculations so the numbers in their reports could well be wrong. For example we can't work off the IBU's of the original recipe for the reasons explained in
this post and the links within it.
The easiest way is to ask the original author what their volume into fermentor and their kettle trub losses were. The other way is to play around with the numbers and see what fits which is impossible to explain here as there are so many variables involved unfortunately.
My best guess is that this author's 'batch size' does mean 'EOBV' so I'll write this into the calculator below.
Note in the file below, I have upped your efficiency into kettle to 79.6% as this is what the auto-efficiency estimator in the new BIABacus gives.
The #DIV/0 Error
In your case, you have this as you hadn't put the AA% in column J. I've fixed that in the attached file - also changed the 5.3 AA%'s that were in tere to 12.0%. The other way you can get a #DIV/0 error is if you set the Time to 0. (The new BIABacus does not have these problems).
The new BIABacus will also be reverting to the ones that were contained in the first version of 'The Calculator' as these were correct. The formula that exists in the current 'The Calculator' is a compromise between BS and the correct formula. If you want the correct Tinseth IBU's change F5 on the hop sheet to the original gravity i.e. 1.064.
So, here's your recipe scaled as best as we can. Let me know if you have any questions.
PP
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