Hi Dan:
I have a ph tester that is fairly accurate. It cost ~$25.00, (about 1.2 grams of gold) which I consider very inexpensive. It is digital readout. It has an accuracy of + or - .1 ph.
I always reduce (neutralize) the nitric acid in my spent AR to somewhere around .1 to 1.0 ph (1.0ph is best) before I add the percipitant. I think this is probally one of the most important steps in refining. I do this with disolved Urea in hot water, for it is faster acting. You never wind up with any undisolved urea in your solution. You can figure how to determine the amount of H2O to disolve the urea. Or PM me and I can tell you.
As far as the meter, should you get one, be sure and order the 4.0PH acid calibration solution. by calibrating the meter with this near acidity level, you improve your tolorance by about 90+ % in the low levels that you will be reading.
As far as the pureness of your gold, I am not sure just how much, if any, the level of Nitric acid at this point of the process effects the pureness. The level of nitric effects the precipitation amounts more than any thing. (like no gold to maximun gold output from the AR). Try never to leave the table untill you get it all. Invest in a bottle of precious metal testing solution, it can pay for itself on one poor precipitation.
Any gold that you refine and sucessifully recover from the AR, then the processes begin on just how fine or pure you want to make it. If you want to be a MASTER refiner, then you should take all the reccomended steps and make .999 near pure gold. I am not a master refiner and stop at .995 to .998. I sell all my recovered and refined gold. There are a couple of folks, Harold, Steve and Cris, that can stir you in the right direction on how to do this.
The ph meter is manufactured by Hanna Instruments. You can buy them on ebay for about ~$25.00 plus ~$7.00 for the 4.0 calibration fluid.
Lots of luck.
Catfish