Well, at first blush this may seem an odd choice of equipment to use to help stabilize your salinity. so, the back story, short and sweet.
For many years I had been dealing with the slow and precipitous drop in salinity over time of my DT. The primary culprit, it seems, is our ever-present and trusty skimmers and the combined use of ATOs. I am sure there are other factors that contribute to this phenomenon as well but that is likely a discussion for another time but likely will not be breached by me.
A few months ago I purchased an extraordinarily loud, like a freight train, DOS to perform AWCs nightly. Thank God I have a two-story concrete home with the bedroom at the opposite end of the house and one flight up. If you have a Neptune Apex and don't have the DOS to perform AWCs nightly, I strongly recommend it and noise-canceling headphones.
For my 125g system, I perform a nightly 2.5g water change and have been doing so for a while. It finally dawned on me that all I need to do is add a little more saltwater than I am taking out to stabilize the slow and inevitable drop in salinity that I have been experiencing. Some tweaking, easily done through Fusion, will likely be needed. Another option is you can up the salinity level in your water change reservoir. The few drawbacks with this are you have a larger volume of water (the reservoir) to adjust to match your salinity drop or if you use NSW as I do not have an abundance of salt to adjust the said volume. Further, it is far easier to tweak the water change volumes to fine-tune and match your salinity drop and you only need to concentrate on adjusting one point in the system rather than the salinity level in your reservoir and the volumes the DOS pumps. Salinity has now been pegged for just over a month at 35 with no fluctuation.
Well, this helped me simplify life and I hope that it may do the same for you.
For many years I had been dealing with the slow and precipitous drop in salinity over time of my DT. The primary culprit, it seems, is our ever-present and trusty skimmers and the combined use of ATOs. I am sure there are other factors that contribute to this phenomenon as well but that is likely a discussion for another time but likely will not be breached by me.
A few months ago I purchased an extraordinarily loud, like a freight train, DOS to perform AWCs nightly. Thank God I have a two-story concrete home with the bedroom at the opposite end of the house and one flight up. If you have a Neptune Apex and don't have the DOS to perform AWCs nightly, I strongly recommend it and noise-canceling headphones.
For my 125g system, I perform a nightly 2.5g water change and have been doing so for a while. It finally dawned on me that all I need to do is add a little more saltwater than I am taking out to stabilize the slow and inevitable drop in salinity that I have been experiencing. Some tweaking, easily done through Fusion, will likely be needed. Another option is you can up the salinity level in your water change reservoir. The few drawbacks with this are you have a larger volume of water (the reservoir) to adjust to match your salinity drop or if you use NSW as I do not have an abundance of salt to adjust the said volume. Further, it is far easier to tweak the water change volumes to fine-tune and match your salinity drop and you only need to concentrate on adjusting one point in the system rather than the salinity level in your reservoir and the volumes the DOS pumps. Salinity has now been pegged for just over a month at 35 with no fluctuation.
Well, this helped me simplify life and I hope that it may do the same for you.
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