I saw that post, it made me thankful I don't have a wife/kids and use an electronic refractometer :D
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Hmmm when I use RO to calibrate mine its right on target with my homemade 35ppt solution... why would you not zero your meter with RO for an instrument that sugggests doing so when it effectively coincidesAnybody Following...
Trust me... Don't zero out your meter to RO water. Use 35 solution, it does makes a different. :)
Hmmm when I use RO to calibrate mine its right on target with my homemade 35ppt solution... why would you not zero your meter with RO for an instrument that sugggests doing so when it effectively coincides
We can't always trust store bought solution based on my experience. I've seen both Sybon and Pinpoint out of whack
Exactly!You should use calibration solutions that bracket your target value - this way any instrument error should be accounted for. If you calibrate to one extreme or the other, any error in the instrument will be magnified more the further away your measurement is from from the calibration point. This is why ph meters use two solutions on either side of 8.3 for calibration.
I made my own homemade solution using Randy's recipe and my milligram scale. Solution should be 1.0264, and my Milwaukee refractometer read 1.026 ;) Close enough for government work!


Lol!!!!!!!!!!!That was a mangrove Island off Key Largo but I have taken it to Bora Bora and most of the Caribbean. I just make my water in between all those places and the fish get over it. There were a lot of manatees there that I was thinking of taking as a clean up crew, but the price of the plastic bag was too much and the airline frowns on taking manatees as they don't fit under the seat. Then there is the problem of them dislodging small frags.
I am also not sure how sensitive manatees are to differences in salinity.
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Hmmm when I use RO to calibrate mine its right on target with my homemade 35ppt solution... why would you not zero your meter with RO for an instrument that sugggests doing so when it effectively coincides
We can't always trust store bought solution based on my experience. I've seen both Sybon and Pinpoint out of whack
You should use calibration solutions that bracket your target value - this way any instrument error should be accounted for. If you calibrate to one extreme or the other, any error in the instrument will be magnified more the further away your measurement is from from the calibration point. This is why ph meters use two solutions on either side of 8.3 for calibration.
Hmmm when I use RO to calibrate mine its right on target with my homemade 35ppt solution... why would you not zero your meter with RO for an instrument that sugggests doing so when it effectively coincides
Interestingly; not very. But they are mammals, thus they actually need fresh water to drink.I am also not sure how sensitive manatees are to differences in salinity.
Interestingly; not very. But they are mammals, thus they actually need fresh water to drink.
Sorry didn't mean for that to come off as a rhetorical. It totally makes sense to calibrate with a solution near target levels leaving less room for error. But just like saying these common brine water refractometers are better off being calibrated with 35ppt solution it should be known that these store bought solutions may be equally or more inaccurate than using RO @ 0.000You may be asking that rhetorically, but there are clear reasons to use a good standard and not RO/DI. How do you know the standards were off? They might have been, but how do you know? In any case, you can make your own and be sure if you have a good scale.
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No matter what manufacturers claim, there are reasons to use a standard other than RO/DI.
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A perfectly designed and perfectly manufactured true seawater refractometer can be correctly calibrated with Ro/DI. If you totally trust them, go for it. :)
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If you have any question about its accuracy, a good standard will eliminate the concern.
Touché. Totallly frustrating when you think you're buying the proper equipment and fluid to do things right. If you find a reasonably priced set of weights let me know. Never thought of checking the calibration of my digital scale but sounds like a good ideaSalinity measurement and refractometer calibration drive me freaking nuts. The solutions read different. Doesn't matter which ones you buy. It's a frickin joke.
is there any info how to make the calibration fluid for refractos
A refractometer is measuring the difference in the speed of light in the air and in the liquid. They do not directly measure the specific gravity of the liquid or the number of particles in the liquid. They take that speed difference and tell you how dense or how much of a specific item dissolved in another item would cause the difference. If you dissolve an equal amount of salt, sodium chloride, and the stuff in sea water, sodium chloride and a lot of other stuff, in water the speed of light will change differently. The difference between a salinity and a salt water refractometer is how they interpret the change in speed.
They also make refractometers that are designed to tell how much sugar is dissolved in water that are used to test grapes.
Lol i use to tlf stuff as well if i dont have standards to cross check test kits. Imo worth the 7 bucksWell, After re-calibrating to my TLF solution.
I mixed up 15 gallons (for a water change) to 1.025sg and stored a lot in small bottles. (Got tired of paying $10 for a tiny calibration bottle)
Now I calibrate to 1.025 from my stored bottles. So, If my TLF solution is wrong then (lol) my sg is going to be off for along time. :)