salinity calibration

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burning2nd

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So after all these years of never checking anything.. my best friend said 2 me last night "when was the last time you used this" (my refractometer). I replyed a long time ago... and proceeded to check my salt level out..


mind after a year+ of water changes my level was only down to 1.023. I use to run closer to 30 but i do remember saying to my self that i wanted to lower the salt level cause its more cost effective,

anyway so i cross checked with my other refratometer and i found that both of them have a diffrent reading after all these years they must have changed a lil...

so this is the questtion.. what does this mean

"PINPOINT Salinity Montior 53.0mS Calibration Fluid +/- 1%@ 77degree F."

the 53.0 is what i dont get.. whats that in converted to PPT?
 
Pick up some calibration fluid and give yourself some piece of mind, pinpoint sells it, there is a high and low fluid to calibrate with.
 
I just chatted with barrier reef about this. What they do is set the refractometer with a calibration fluid. Then once its set, they test DI water (which should be 1.000) and make sure it reads correctly.

rob
 
That's not right... unless of course you want to check water to make sure its 1.000. Not arguing what you were told - just that you shouldn't do it that way.

Use the calibration fluid and set it at that - that's the range you're measuring. For example, when my refractometer is spot on with the Pinpoint fluid, it does NOT read zero with DI water.

There is a recent thread about all this in the Chemistry forum also.
 
wait a min... here were not making any sence..

i have the pinpoint cali fluid.. what should that read?
53 mS is what in parts per trillion 1.026?
 
That's not right... unless of course you want to check water to make sure its 1.000. Not arguing what you were told - just that you shouldn't do it that way.

Use the calibration fluid and set it at that - that's the range you're measuring. For example, when my refractometer is spot on with the Pinpoint fluid, it does NOT read zero with DI water.

There is a recent thread about all this in the Chemistry forum also.[/QUOTE

Kurt is right. Wont always be right at 1.000. Some Refracts we have had did but others have a trace measurement. I'll have to read the Chemistry Thread to find out what its supposed to measure.
 
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Got it now. Kurts point is correct but theoretically if your refractometer had zero slope error you should get a 1.000 reading of RO/DI water after calibrating with Pinpoint's Solution. For measuring our tank's salinity range using the solution is best and double checking with RO/DI is meaningless, other than checking your unit for slope error.
 
Agree... with a perfect unit with no slope error, it wouldn't matter where you calibrate it. Now if I'm using it to check the SG of my homebrew... that's a totally different calibration fluid!:D
 
Do you use the same refractometer for checking the O.G. of your homebrew? I saw some that were specifically marketed for homebrew, are they different?

Would be nice to be able to use this for getting O.G., especially if it will do a temp adjustment for me. Would be so much more accurate.

If I could use this to do OG and FG, it would really cut down on the amount of wort I had to use for testing (although I do enjoy drinking some of it out of the hydrometer cylinder.)
 
[minor thread drift...]

Actually... it was more of a joke than being serious! I think the ones marketed to homebrewers just have different scales on them (Brix, potential alcohol) along with the SG. As far as I know, SG is SG... regardless of the fluid being measured.

I've used my refractometer a few times to test wort, and its been within a couple points of my hydrometer. But I still use the hydrometer because, well... it's what I've always used, and consistency is half the battle. I don't really want to change things up once I have something that works. Plus... my hydrometer cylinder isn't much bigger than the hydrometer so I'm not wasting much, and like you say - taking a sip or two at that stage is just part of the process!

[/minor thread drift. :) ]
 

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