How cold is too cold to mix salt?

Sean Duggan

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As the title states I’m curious on how cold is too cold to mix salt. I have a fish room that I heat to about 70-72° and I have my rodi and mixing station in there. Do I have to heat the water to my desired 78° before I mix or is that 70-72° okay? I know salinity varies with temperature. I was wondering if this temperature difference will cause a problem.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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There’s no concern with dissolving salt in cold water. It may go in more slowly, but problematic precipitates like calcium carbonate are actually less likely to form at lower temperatures.
 

NanoDJS

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Id say its prob 65 to 68 in the basement where my fish room resides , I mix all my salt cold and then raise the temp. Dont know if that helps , never had any issue .
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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I never heat my WC water. Just leave it at room temp when mixing and using. For the 10G I change on my 80G tank, it only drops the temp by 5 degrees. And within the hour it's back up to normal temps.
You drop the temp by 5 deg in a few min?

I too never heated my water from the 60’s, but I also used it very slowly with an auto water changer.
 

homer1475

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You drop the temp by 5 deg in a few min?

I too never heated my water from the 60’s, but I also used it very slowly with an auto water changer.
Temp in my sump drops by 5 degrees(tank is kept at 78, house is roughly 75), until I turn the return back on and it gets mixed in.

Actual tank temp only drops by like a 1 degree.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Temp in my sump drops by 5 degrees(tank is kept at 78, house is roughly 75), until I turn the return back on and it gets mixed in.

Actual tank temp only drops by like a 1 degree.

oh, ok,that sounds better
 

zapbap99

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warmer faster, colder slower. simple as that i always go heat because i mean plug a 50 watt heater in a 20 gallon brute have it on deck
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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warmer faster, colder slower. simple as that i always go heat because i mean plug a 50 watt heater in a 20 gallon brute have it on deck

But, calcium carbonate precipitation is more likely in warmer water where it is less soluble. Some salt companies even warn of that.
 

Jason mack

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Might be a stupid question ......
Doesn't temp affect salinity ...wont it read different at different temps ....I was told this once .
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Might be a stupid question ......
Doesn't temp affect salinity ...wont it read different at different temps ....I was told this once .

Temperature does not impact salinity. It does impact some measurement methods, and not others. Depending on what method you use, it either corrects for you (e,g., conductivity) or you need to correct manually (e.g., glass hydrometer).
 

Paul J

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I use cold R/O water below 10 degrees overnight, Then add the heater and warm up to 26 degrees.
Check SG and if that's OK it ready to go.
 

Darren in Tacoma

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I use cold R/O water below 10 degrees overnight, Then add the heater and warm up to 26 degrees.
Check SG and if that's OK it ready to go.
What?? You can't mix water when it's still frozen, then heat it up till it's still frozen!

Oh, wait.....what side of the road do you drive on when you go get your salt?
 

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