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supersmile 03-27-2007 06:18 PM

Help.....saltwater levels
 
Just wondering what everyone keeps their salinity at for their reef tanks??? I know some people like to keep the levels higher. My dwarf angel just died and I am wondering if it could be from my salt water level being too high. I have noticed my Zenia hasn't been opening lately either.

DanG 03-27-2007 06:21 PM

How high do you keep yours? How are you measuring it? Are you using a float type hydrometer or are you using a refractometer? A refractometer is much more accurate than the hydrometers, some of which can be off (I've seen both high and low) by as much as .005.

Personally, I keep my tank at 1.024.

How are your other levels, Ca, Alk, MG? When was your last water change?

supersmile 03-27-2007 06:25 PM

I am using a hydrometer. I just tested my levels in everything else last week and they were fine. Since I noticed last night that my salt level was high I removed some water and just added plain treated tap water. The level has gone down to about 1.026. Should I keep doing that until the level comes down?

justinl 03-27-2007 06:38 PM

fish and inverts can do fine short term in low or high salinity. what really kills them in terms of salinity is quick change in salinity. If you want to drop your salinity, do it slowly over at least a day. I suggest a drip of freshwater.

kwirky 03-27-2007 07:04 PM

I don't know if having a high salinity could have been the sole cause of death in your fish. I'm thinking there are other factors involved too.

my own hydrometer was 0.003 off. I was first running my system supposedly at 1.026 when it was actually being run at 1.029. I discovered this after I bought my refractometer. If you can't afford one now, maybe see if anyone in the area will come over with theirs? Then you can find out where your hydrometer is really at and adjust accordingly. Remember to allways keep the hydrometer submerged in saltwater. Just leave it in your sump, or hanging off the side of the tank if it's sumpless. If it dries out, you have to soak it in salt water for 24 hours again, and it's reading will have to be re-calibrated with a refractometer.

FYI if you're wondering about my own tank's parameters:

I run my system between 1.024-1.025 salinity, depending on the month and whether I've been removing water from the tank due to acclimating new additions or frag packing etc. Each water change I bring it back up to 1.025, usually a .001 of a change. I have a ghetto air driven top off system with a 6g glass jug I fill every 2-3 days. I use a refractometer now.

my calcium's kept at 420, and alkalinity at 7-8 dkh. My ph is 8.2 mid day, and 8.0 late at night. nitrates are kept undetectable (below 0.2ppm with a salifert kit). I only have 4 small (<3") fish in my 120g tank.

justinl 03-27-2007 07:22 PM

you have to keep the hydrometer submerged all the time? wth, i... didn't know that. The package says you only need to calibrate once and then after use just rinse in warm freshwater.

Joe Reefer 03-27-2007 08:01 PM

I keep mine at a steady 1.026.:biggrin:

muck 03-27-2007 08:04 PM

1.025 - 1.026 here

supersmile 03-27-2007 08:19 PM

Why do you have to keep your hydrometer submerged in the tank all the time? How do you calibrate it? Mine had no instructions about that????

kwirky 03-27-2007 10:28 PM

My deep 6, on the package, said it should be soaked the first time for 24 hours, and again if it dries out. Might as well just leave it constantly submerged then. I've heard various others state the same. And my girlfriend's dad makes *ahem* moonshine, and he has to soak his hydrometer at all times or else he might make cyanide by accident lol. It's a swing needle hydrometer meant for wine/alcohol making.

from my own experiences, mine would fluctuate in reading according to my refractometer unless it was soaked recently.

I mean calibrating by finding the variance of your meter using a refractometer. here's a good article explaining hydrometers, their good accuracy, and how to get them accurate. A better term than "calibration" like i've used, would be the author's term "correction factor." It's about finding the correction factor for your own hydrometer.

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2006/9/lines

sorry about the confusion over "calibration" lol. I meant "correction factor"


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