Salinity Problem

Blackcoupe369

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My salinity is at 1.030. I slowly added an entire gallon of distilled water, the salinity didn’t even budge? I feel like a gallon is already two much to be adding to a 30 gallon tank. Should I be adding more?
 

HudsonReefer2.0

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Take more water out and save it. Add more distilled or rodi until u get 1.026. If u go lower add some of the saltwater back to system.
 

gbroadbridge

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Yes it came with it. Was expensive, $100
Okay, you may want to look at an article on how to make your own calibration solution in future.


You may wish to check that your calibration is correct by comparing with another source.
Perhaps get your LFS to compare your device against their own water?

To lower salinity it is best to remove a quantity of water from the tank and replace with RODI (perhaps your ATO will do the top up for you).

You don't want to adjust too quickly as it could harm fish/coral.
 

vetteguy53081

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My salinity is at 1.030. I slowly added an entire gallon of distilled water, the salinity didn’t even budge? I feel like a gallon is already two much to be adding to a 30 gallon tank. Should I be adding more?
Calibrate and clean your tester. In a 30g, there should have been some drop although not significant.
You can also take a water sample to a trusted LFS and have them test for you and you will then know if yours is accurate or not
 
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vetteguy53081

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Gtinnel

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Adding a gallon of distilled water to a 30g tank will not make much of an overall difference to salinity and may not even be enough to show a change on your refractometer. The other issue is that you really need to remove some of the saltwater from the tank and replace it with fresh water. Just adding fresh water to the tank will only lower the salinity until that water evaporates back out. It’s more about removing the salt than “diluting” the salt with more water.

Just remember that changing salinity is best done slowly and here is a calculator that can help you tell how much water you will need to change to get the salinity where you want it.

 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Wait you spent $100 on a refractometer?

Good refractometers can be quite expensive. IMO, a lot of the problems that folks have with salinity in this hobby is because the devices most often used are to cheaply manufactured, and thus lack sufficient quality.
 
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Blackcoupe369

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Good refractometers can be quite expensive. IMO, a lot of the problems that folks have with salinity in this hobby is because the devices most often used are to cheaply manufactured, and thus lack sufficient quality.
It’s better to not cheap out to extinguish all of the future headaches
 
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Blackcoupe369

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Adding a gallon of distilled water to a 30g tank will not make much of an overall difference to salinity and may not even be enough to show a change on your refractometer. The other issue is that you really need to remove some of the saltwater from the tank and replace it with fresh water. Just adding fresh water to the tank will only lower the salinity until that water evaporates back out. It’s more about removing the salt than “diluting” the salt with more water.

Just remember that changing salinity is best done slowly and here is a calculator that can help you tell how much water you will need to change to get the salinity where you want it.

How much do you recommend I should take out and replace with freshwater?
 

Troylee

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Good refractometers can be quite expensive. IMO, a lot of the problems that folks have with salinity in this hobby is because the devices most often used are to cheaply manufactured, and thus lack sufficient quality.
I use a plastic hydrometer still lol.. is it that accurate? Idk but it works for me! I just keep it at 1.026 no matter what the accuracy is.
 

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Good refractometers can be quite expensive. IMO, a lot of the problems that folks have with salinity in this hobby is because the devices most often used are to cheaply manufactured, and thus lack sufficient quality.


How would one know if one is better quality than another?
 

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