It's definitely possible to calculate it if you know the temp the unit was calibrated for and know the temp of the sample, but personally, I don't think you need to go through all that. Considering we run our tanks at relatively consistent temps, I would just calibrate the unit with the solution mentioned in Randy's article linked above. Just have the calibration solution at around the average temp you're running the tank at. That should be accurate enough for our purposes IMO.bleedingthought":3nldu2to said:How does the reading change (or what should I be aiming for) when the temperature is different?
Is there an equation? Trying to figure out what salinity the refractometer should read if the temp is around 81 degrees and there's no ATC.
Thanks Chris!ChrisRD":3g76g720 said:It's definitely possible to calculate it if you know the temp the unit was calibrated for and know the temp of the sample, but personally, I don't think you need to go through all that. Considering we run our tanks at relatively consistent temps, I would just calibrate the unit with the solution mentioned in Randy's article linked above. Just have the calibration solution at around the average temp you're running the tank at. That should be accurate enough for our purposes IMO.bleedingthought":3g76g720 said:How does the reading change (or what should I be aiming for) when the temperature is different?
Is there an equation? Trying to figure out what salinity the refractometer should read if the temp is around 81 degrees and there's no ATC.