Oh thanks sorry I made those up in a rushI edited it to add the zero in there @ashburn2k
Me too34 ppt
It's basically natural sea water levels when measuring at reef temperatures: https://reefs.com/magazine/chemistr...mple, the specific gravity,the 77 °F standard.What's the benefit of 1.026 over 1.025 ?
Doee it make any difference for fish/ corals?
It seems a good portion of members are running at that salinty level?
35 PSU/1.026 sg is the salinity of the ocean. I doubt there’s a noticeable difference in fish/corals to dilute slightly. Like most of our water parameters, we are just trying to make it like a tropical ocean unless there’s some specific reason to deviate. For fish-only systems (no coral) people often run lower salinity because it’s harder on fish disease organisms than on the fish I think.What's the benefit of 1.026 over 1.025 ?
Doee it make any difference for fish/ corals?
It seems a good portion of members are running at that salinty level?
Whats more important is maintaing a stable number on your system, having a range verse a set number you maintain via a auto top off means you would have constant fluxuations thats not good for coral, fish and inverts.Does anyone here just run with whatever they get within a range?
Yes within the range of 34.5-35.5 PSU lolDoes anyone here just run with whatever they get within a range?
I mean when you add the saltwater to the tank and after addition the final reads at say 1.024 instead of 1.025. Do people fiddle with it to get it exact or just leave it because its hit within a specific range of +\-.001.Yes within the range of 34.5-35.5 PSU lol
I’m not sure what you mean by “whatever they get”- Do you mean you don’t check salinity in your tank or new salt water? I don’t recommend that.