Wanderlust21
Supporting Member
Hey all, I’m looking for alternative ideas for the calibration fluid on a Neptune trident. I’m wanting to be able to calibrate it more frequent than once every 3 months. Thoughts?
Question -are you just running sailfert against a reading and if, lets say trident says 8.00 but seifert gives 8.1 you just know to add that .1 in?I agree with above, tank water calibration against salifert (or your kit of choice). I do it every time I change a bottle of reagent.
Def more expensive. I think you can order it from Neptune cheaper -but then you need to pay for shipping!And Calibration solution is like 12 bucks from multiple online vendors
You can do that but another way is to test with Salifert or whatever you trust then use the results you get to calibrate the Trident, intake tube still in your tank, so it reads the same.Question -are you just running sailfert against a reading and if, lets say trident says 8.00 but seifert gives 8.1 you just know to add that .1 in?
No. I run all of my salifert tests. Write the number down. Then I go into the calibration settings on the Trident. I plug those numbers into it and then allow it to draw a sample of tank water and calibrate to those numbers.Question -are you just running sailfert against a reading and if, lets say trident says 8.00 but seifert gives 8.1 you just know to add that .1 in?
The first thing you do, is do manual tests.
Write the numbers down. You will forget by the time you need to enter them in.
Next, go into Apex fusion, find your Trident and go hereView attachment 77032
This will bring up another menu.
First click where I circled and put a number one. That will tell the machine it's going to calibrate. Next, input the numbers that you wrote down where I put the two.
View attachment 77031
Finally, scroll back to the top and click the send button to send the command to the cloud and then back to your ApexView attachment 77030
The machine will take about 45 minutes and will recalibrate when it's all done. The numbers you input it will be on the screen.
On a side note, it is always a good idea to prime the sample and all three of the reagents before you do this. That way you know you are getting a fresh sample and there's no residual from a previous bottle of reagent in the tubing.
You should be good for a month.
Hope that helps.
I don't know if you are new to Apex or not, you may want to consider scrolling through this. This it was The unofficial manual written by Russ M back before Apex adopted it as their own and then gave Russ a job.