Tropic marin pro reef high dkh

Zach Hart

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Hi I just bought a new bucket of tropic marin pro reef salt, mixed it up and tested the water to see what dkh it would be because it says it should be between 7-8dkh. However when I test it it reads 9.6-9.9 in the two tests that I performed with Hanna, and similarly with the Red Sea test kit. Anyone have any ideas why the dkh is so high? I had this problem with the old tropic Marin bucket that this one is replacing as that one gave me a dkh of 10.8. Any ideas would be helpful and what I could do to remedy. Thanks
 

Saltyreef

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Are you mixing your salt bucket?

I use a different brand but when it arrives, i dump the bag out into the bucket so it mixes really good.

If it was me i would be after a new brand of salt with 3 inconsistant buckets.
 

Potatohead

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Two consecutive buckets, of different types of salt, alk is high on both? I have a hard time believing this isn't test or salinity error.

What are you using to calibrate the salinity devices? What does the freshly mixed saltwater test for calcium and mag?
 
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Zach Hart

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Two consecutive buckets, of different types of salt, alk is high on both? I have a hard time believing this isn't test or salinity error.
my thoughts exactly. However I recalibrated both salinity tools and had my trident test the alkalinity aswell. So pretty sure it’s right. The salt was tropic Marin pro both times just a different batch
 

wil-yuhm

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If only small or partial water changes might higher dkh be desirable?
Not questioning your test methods or equipment.
 

arking_mark

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my thoughts exactly. However I recalibrated both salinity tools and had my trident test the alkalinity aswell. So pretty sure it’s right. The salt was tropic Marin pro both times just a different batch

Try mixing by cup and see what you get. I ended throwing out two refractometers...I only trust my high-precision TM hydrometer.
 
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Zach Hart

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If only doing small or partial water exchanges might higher dkh be desirable?
Not questioning your test methods or equipment.
Well I try to keep dkh around 7-8 coz I’ve got acros. When I do a water change using 10dkh water it causes a spike in alkalinity
 

wil-yuhm

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Well I try to keep dkh around 7-8 coz I’ve got acros. When I do a water change using 10dkh water it causes a spike in alkalinity

Thank you. I received an order of Instant Ocean reef crystals momentarily ago and read same high dkh was tested by reef2reef members.
 

Potatohead

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my thoughts exactly. However I recalibrated both salinity tools and had my trident test the alkalinity aswell. So pretty sure it’s right

At this point I would verify 100% your salinity calibration solution is correct. If it's not one of those 35 ppt pouches (like the ph 7.0 and 10.0 things) and it maybe an older bottle or something I would be questioning it for sure.

will check in a minute

If they're also high it's almost certainly high salinity
 

arking_mark

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By cup do you mean like grams? I’m in uk lol
Lol. Per TM Pro instructions...

To achieve a salinity level of 32–35‰ (psu), dissolve 35 ml (approx. 37–40 g / 1.3–1.4 oz.) of Tropic Marin® Pro-Reef for every litre or 0.5 cup (approx. 140-150 g) for every US-gallon of water in a container, circulating continuously.
 
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Zach Hart

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At this point I would verify 100% your salinity calibration solution is correct. If it's not one of those 35 ppt pouches (like the ph 7.0 and 10.0 things) and it maybe an older bottle or something I would be questioning it for sure.



If they're also high it's almost certainly high salinity
It’s the Hanna calibration solution packet so it should be right
 
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Zach Hart

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Na mixing didn’t help. And neither did mixing the salt in exact weight. Still testing 9.8dkh but the calcium is 430 now instead of 390 like it was before
 

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