As above,
I was told by the chemical supplier to add 16 litres of 15% hypo to my 60l drum. The rest water. For a 2% solution.
I’ve always used this and added a bit here and there to strengthen.
There must be some maths to it (obviously)
What’s the simplest way?
I used to sometimes use a calculation that was on the softwash uk forum, but just checked and it’s disappeared!
I have used the:
1 part hypo plus 4 parts water = 5.
15% hypo divided by 5 = 3% mix.
My problem is I use a 60l drum, so to get say a 1.5% mix the above maths doesn’t work as it’s more like 1 parts hypo to 8 parts water to get 1.5% ish. So how do I work that out but in a 60 litre drum?
I should have worked harder at maths in school.😂
I think your maths is correct.
Pour 12 litres of water into your 60 litre container.
Make a mark, at the water level, with a permanent pen.
Tip out the water.
This will give you, your 4-1 ratio which = 5 (5 divided by 15) gives you 3% mix.
So 12 litres of hypo with 48 litres of water.
So if your pour 6 litres of water in and make your permanent mark
then tip out your water.
You'll have 6 litres of hypo and 54 litres of water, which will be 9-1 ratio (9+1 = 10) divided by 15 = 1.5 mix.
I use water as a measure (rather than hypo) because it's less dangerous, when just doing measurements.
I think that's correct.