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To be fair, a good floating glass bulb hydrometer with an appropriately sized graduated cylinder is perhaps the "gold standard", but these are just simply inconvenient for most of us keeping aquaria. You're right about a typical refractometer, I believe.The standard one that you hold up to the light. Tried and true.
Yes - each device is factory calibrated. There are no moving parts.So it seems that the consensus is that the TM floating hydrometer is the most accurate device. Is this correct?
It may be the cheapest device with good accuracy and nearly foolproof use. It is not the most accurate, which is likely a high end conductivity meter. Just keeping the perspective on the strong word “most”. Chemical oceanographers use conductivity meters, and that is how the PSU salinity scale is defined.So it seems that the consensus is that the TM floating hydrometer is the most accurate device. Is this correct?
I would not disagree with this. My fault for accepting most, as in the context of the devices discussed in this thread.It may be the cheapest device with good accuracy and nearly foolproof use. It is not the most accurate, which is likely a high end conductivity meter. Just keeping the perspective on the strong word “most”. Chemical oceanographers use conductivity meters, and that is how the PSU salinity scale is defined.
Is it the most accurate device for the home aquarist? (That would be me ).
I would not disagree with this. My fault for accepting most, as in the context of the devices discussed in this thread.
I do wonder though how accurate and precise a reference meter is compared to the TM. It would be interesting to see a controlled test, even if it is pointless for our purposes.