oahogset
New Member
I know a refractometer is more accurate, but I still have a few questions...
Why is everybody using SG (specific gravity) instead of salinity, even though they are telling people to use a refractometer? The refractometer is actually measuring how much salt is in the water, not how heavy it is compared to freshwater, so why use SG at all?
Telling someone to do hyposalinity at SG=1.009, but make sure you use a refractometer, kinda sounds like an inaccurate statement to me. Why do you call it hyposalinity when you actually don't say what the salinity is supposed to be? How do I know what the salinity needs to be for hyposalinity? SG=1.009 at what temperature?
Is there any reliable conversion tables for SG/salinity at different temperatures? I have seen a few, but they all vary by 5% give or take.
Why don't people calibrate their hydrometers?
I'm sure some of these questions have been answered somewhere in this forum, but I haven't been able to find them.
Thanks in advance!
Why is everybody using SG (specific gravity) instead of salinity, even though they are telling people to use a refractometer? The refractometer is actually measuring how much salt is in the water, not how heavy it is compared to freshwater, so why use SG at all?
Telling someone to do hyposalinity at SG=1.009, but make sure you use a refractometer, kinda sounds like an inaccurate statement to me. Why do you call it hyposalinity when you actually don't say what the salinity is supposed to be? How do I know what the salinity needs to be for hyposalinity? SG=1.009 at what temperature?
Is there any reliable conversion tables for SG/salinity at different temperatures? I have seen a few, but they all vary by 5% give or take.
Why don't people calibrate their hydrometers?
I'm sure some of these questions have been answered somewhere in this forum, but I haven't been able to find them.
Thanks in advance!