At what salinity will you not be able to keep anything hard alive?
Reason I ask is this.. I cant keep anything hard alive, and some things soft do not do well either.. I have a refractometer that I have bought and used from the very beginning. I also have the juice to keep it calibrated. Well if you look at all my past threads on the issue of keeping this stuff alive, I have pretty much gone thru every possible thing that could be the issue, except for that dang refractometer being off. I bought a cheapo salinity checker from Petco which is when I really started to think about that being the issue. When I checked it my salinity was between 1.028-1.030. I am going to go to the "real" fish store tomorrow and get me another checker, and have them check as well to see what they get. But my question is, at what salinity will your corals slowly start to die off because it?
Mike
Reason I ask is this.. I cant keep anything hard alive, and some things soft do not do well either.. I have a refractometer that I have bought and used from the very beginning. I also have the juice to keep it calibrated. Well if you look at all my past threads on the issue of keeping this stuff alive, I have pretty much gone thru every possible thing that could be the issue, except for that dang refractometer being off. I bought a cheapo salinity checker from Petco which is when I really started to think about that being the issue. When I checked it my salinity was between 1.028-1.030. I am going to go to the "real" fish store tomorrow and get me another checker, and have them check as well to see what they get. But my question is, at what salinity will your corals slowly start to die off because it?
Mike


