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#1
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![]() -I understand that when ur water evaporates u put freshwater and all because the water evaporates but not the salt but, but when u put freshwater doesn't it lower ur SG a bit? -cuz right now it's sittin' @ 1.022
and i was wondering if an liter of water cud drop it 2 about 1.021?
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33g fowlr / 20g sump / 400 watt pendant / Euro-Reef RC80~~~~lavendar tang, lemon butterfly, snowflake eel, hawaiian spotted puffer, tomato clown, chomis.. My reef~http://i297.photobucket.com/albums/m...-/P4300459.jpg |
#2
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![]() You are correct. By adding fresh water (FW) you will lower your SG. However, with the initial evaporation of water (without loosing salt) your SG should have increased. Therefore, by adding FW you should be restoring (lowering) your SG to its previous value before the evaporation.
A SG of 1.021 would be ok for a fish only system. However, if you have inverts or coral that is too low. I would aim for 1.024-1.026. However, the most important thing is to increase or correct your SG slowly, particularly if you have inverts/corals. If you want to increase your SG now, add salt water instead of FW until your SG if where you want it, then keep up with your evaporation loss regularly to maintain a constant SG. Good luck
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300 gal starphire custom built in pentagon reef (+90 gal sump on Blue Line 100 HD return pump, 210lb LR, Euro-Reef RC250 skimmer, 2x400W MH, 2x28W compacts, 2xTurbelle classic 4002 pumps & Turbelle Stream 6100 on 7095 Multicontroller, running ZEOvit) Livestock Fish: damsels; sailfin, yellow, regal & naso tangs; ocellaris & tomato clowns; lyretail anthias; foxface lo; flame angelfish corals: a few |
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