I have been using less water than needed in my partial mash recipes. For a target of 8 gal into 2 (5 gal) fermenters, I have been using 3 (+1 gal sparge) in the mash step and 2 gal for boiling bittering hops, then adding the mash and sparge water to the boil kettle and mixing in the extract and raising to boiling and adding late addition hops. Then I chill the concentrated wort to about 90 degr. F, measure the sp. gr. and add water to bring to target volume. (I know this is not the classic schedule, but I cannot think if a good reason why it shouldn't give quite similar results and it is faster.) Yesterday I did this and got to a significantly higher OG than my target. I wanted to calculate the amount of water to add to the fermenters after splitting the volumes, since I was near the top of my kettle after adding water. My target was 1.060 so I set up an equation to solve
8 gal * 1.076 = x_vol * 1.060
I got a ridiculously low number (about 2 cups) and eventually figured how to do it correctly, but I thought I would just ask a question here so it could be on the record to the next person to benefit from my mistake. (I did a search to see if this had been addressed earlier but failed to find a duplicate.)