I believe the goal is to know exactly how much of a soluble substance to add to neutralize an acid, and the problem is that methyl orange only detects between pH 3.1 (red) -4.4 (yellow), which is not within the neutral range, so it can't possibly help you know how much of a base you need to add to neutralize an acid.
I have a book that says that when making sodium sulfate crystals, when mixing sodium hydroxide with sulfuric acid, once the indicator turns orange (which should be around pH 3.8 ), the titration is complete, which doesn't make sense because at pH 3.8 the acid is not neutralized.
It says once the indicator has turned orange, do the experiment again without the indicator, using the same amounts that you used to get the indicator to turn orange, then evaporate the solution (by boiling) until the point where crystals form on cooling - but once again orange on methyl orange is not neutral so why is it being used? Shouldn't the book suggest an indicator that indicates when the solution is neutral?