Thanks for the help. I was trying to figure out why my test kits were all in mg/l, yet all the reference material I have talks in ppm. That shows you what staying up late reading reef books will do for you!
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by hgsports:
<STRONG>Ah.... you're right, that is tough
Thanks for the help. I was trying to figure out why my test kits were all in mg/l, yet all the reference material I have talks in ppm. That shows you what staying up late reading reef books will do for you!
John</STRONG><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Don't worry, hg, I battled with many pool operators and a coworker (who was supposedly a chem major) over that one. I had to work it out to prove it to him and he still insists I'm wrong.
OK for ppm by weight, 1mg/L is the same as 1 ppm since 1L of pure water has a mass of 1kg, therefore 1mg/L is equivalent to 1mg/1kg or 1 ppm by WEIGHT. This is true for concentrations in WATER only.