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- Jul 15, 2025
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Hey everyone,
Long-time lurker, first-time poster here. My soft coral-heavy reef (mostly leathers, zoas, mushrooms, some xenia and nems) has been running stable for over 2.5 years with no major issues—everything grows well, fish are active and eating great, no unexplained losses or stress signs.
I've been using this old triple-scale beer & wine hydrometer (calibrated @60°F/15.6°C, the one with the little wine glass logo) for salinity checks. It consistently reads around 1.026 SG, and I've stuck to that for top-offs and water changes.
Recently picked up a cheap ~$17 ATC refractometer (with the app for reading the scale/photo). After calibrating it with RODI (reads ~0) and testing tank water, it shows 1.030 SG consistently. Big difference!
Quick specs:
Tank temp: ~78°F
Livestock: Soft corals thriving, fish happy (active, good colors/appetite)
No sudden changes—evaporation topped off as usual
Haven't used proper 35 ppt calibration fluid yet (planning to grab some)
From reading old threads here (like the big "Refractometers or Hydrometers: Why the Latter Should Contain a Warning" article and tons of discrepancy posts), it seems brewing hydrometers often read low in seawater due to ionic differences, temp calibration, etc. Many say calibrated refractometers are more reliable for true salinity/refractive index in marine mixes.
But... my tank has been fine at whatever the "real" level is (probably closer to 1.030 if refracto is right). Softies seem to love it, fish no complaints. Stability > perfection, right?
Questions for the experts:
Should I trust the refractometer more and slowly drop to 1.025–1.026 (gradual changes only)?
Or keep doing what works since everything's happy and adapted?
Anyone else use a beer/wine hydrometer long-term successfully, or is it always off by ~0.004 in reefs?
Best way to confirm—LFS test, Tropic Marin hydrometer, or just get calibration fluid and recheck?
Planning to recalibrate the refracto with actual 35 ppt fluid soon and maybe hit up a local shop in CT for a second opinion. Attached pics of the hydrometer for reference.
Thanks in advance—love this community!
I don't know what I should do I did use AI to make a post because I gave it all the info I'm getting stresses about it but it has been doing good for so long useing the Glass hydrometer
Picture
Long-time lurker, first-time poster here. My soft coral-heavy reef (mostly leathers, zoas, mushrooms, some xenia and nems) has been running stable for over 2.5 years with no major issues—everything grows well, fish are active and eating great, no unexplained losses or stress signs.
I've been using this old triple-scale beer & wine hydrometer (calibrated @60°F/15.6°C, the one with the little wine glass logo) for salinity checks. It consistently reads around 1.026 SG, and I've stuck to that for top-offs and water changes.
Recently picked up a cheap ~$17 ATC refractometer (with the app for reading the scale/photo). After calibrating it with RODI (reads ~0) and testing tank water, it shows 1.030 SG consistently. Big difference!
Quick specs:
Tank temp: ~78°F
Livestock: Soft corals thriving, fish happy (active, good colors/appetite)
No sudden changes—evaporation topped off as usual
Haven't used proper 35 ppt calibration fluid yet (planning to grab some)
From reading old threads here (like the big "Refractometers or Hydrometers: Why the Latter Should Contain a Warning" article and tons of discrepancy posts), it seems brewing hydrometers often read low in seawater due to ionic differences, temp calibration, etc. Many say calibrated refractometers are more reliable for true salinity/refractive index in marine mixes.
But... my tank has been fine at whatever the "real" level is (probably closer to 1.030 if refracto is right). Softies seem to love it, fish no complaints. Stability > perfection, right?
Questions for the experts:
Should I trust the refractometer more and slowly drop to 1.025–1.026 (gradual changes only)?
Or keep doing what works since everything's happy and adapted?
Anyone else use a beer/wine hydrometer long-term successfully, or is it always off by ~0.004 in reefs?
Best way to confirm—LFS test, Tropic Marin hydrometer, or just get calibration fluid and recheck?
Planning to recalibrate the refracto with actual 35 ppt fluid soon and maybe hit up a local shop in CT for a second opinion. Attached pics of the hydrometer for reference.
Thanks in advance—love this community!
I don't know what I should do I did use AI to make a post because I gave it all the info I'm getting stresses about it but it has been doing good for so long useing the Glass hydrometer
Picture
