5StarDog wrote:To me this is a serious flaw in the BeerSmith2 program. If you adjust the trub to zero the water volumes are off as are the OG and the pre-boil SG calculations. If you leave the trub in the efficiency is off by the amount of the trub. That makes the grain bill be light by the the percentage of trub to total water. I can manipulate the batch size by the amount of the trub to get the correct OG and pre-boil SG but that throws off other need calculation. The bottom line is when I make the calculation by hand they should match BeerSmith2 and they do NOT. This is either a bug or the reasoning is flawed. I may look at another program. Now I have to either go back and forth with the batch size or calculate by hand.
atomicpunk wrote: If the features are not for you (say you are only an 8th level nerd)

atomicpunk wrote:As with any software program, crap in = crap out.
atomicpunk wrote:You need to know the theory and basics behind what the program is trying to do for you so you can check the output.
atomicpunk wrote:I will be the first to admit the way BS does it calcs based on losses is very confusing and I really screwed up my first batch of beer when trying to account for the fact that my keggle output is high and I leave behind almost 2 gallons of wort.
atomicpunk wrote: I now set all my losses to zero and simply scale "up" the 6 gallon recipes to 7.5 knowing I will leave behind 2 gallons (7.5-2=5.5 to fermentor as JZ intends). The extra money spent on additional grains is negligible for this homebrewer.
atomicpunk wrote:Keep in mind that BS is a very robust program that has features and a design that allows for the hard core brewer to go nuts with, as it should for a paid program.
atomicpunk wrote:If the features are not for you (say you are only an 8th level nerd) then simply learn how to program without them.
spiderwrangler wrote:atomicpunk wrote: If the features are not for you (say you are only an 8th level nerd)
BURN!
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