Those pictures did turn out good, Charlie. Too bad my corals don't look that good anymore. I've been having some issues with my tank, and I'm basically just sick of using either inferior testing, or trying to use my spidey sense to figure out what's going on. I wanted some serious equipment . . .
The first thing I got was a refractometer. I tried this quite awhile ago, but gave up and returned it after I just could not read it. This time, I got the Marine Depot Pro model. Wow. What a huge difference! I'm so excited! The scale is limited to only what you'd need, and with a strong light, is super easy to read. Yay! I can finally read salinity very accurately. The bad news was that my salinity was reading 1.018 :faint2: So, through water changes and adding saltwater as topoff, in about 2 weeks time I've brought it up to 1.023 . . . almost there, and the shrimp is doing fine. I feel so much better knowing that every batch of salt I mix up has the right salinity now. I like to be meticulous, it's just really hard to do when you're using inferior equipment (like a swing arm hydrometer). I also ditched my old calcium test kit and got a Salifert kit this time. Another huge upgrade, and a pleasure to use.
Check it out . . .
I was so excited about the salinity and calcium epiphany, that I wanted to see if my pH was anywhere near where it needed to be. I got an American Marine Pinpoint pH monitor.
Here it is being calibrated to 7 then 10:
And the moment of truth . . .
Looks like everything is ok there. I'm having fun watching it change when I add alkalinity (10ml of B-Ionic), and to see how much it changes (from 8.15 to 8.26). It was very informative to see what it dropped to overnight (8.026 this morning) and back up to during the day. I'm so glad I got a digital probe . . I'm loving the accuracy, instead of trying to figure out what freakin color I was looking at.
Yay! Very very happy with my purchases, and hoping to one day soon have a thriving, beautiful tank again. Plus, I get to use some fun techie stuff!