Hydrometer vs. Refractometer

How do you measure your salinity

  • Refractometer

    Votes: 91 70.5%
  • Hydrometer--never checked for accuracy

    Votes: 15 11.6%
  • Hydrometer--checked against refractometer

    Votes: 19 14.7%
  • Why is salinity important again?

    Votes: 4 3.1%

  • Total voters
    129
I have a TropicMarin hydrometer, about 12" long, and measures to 4 decimal places. Supposed to be lab grade, but I use a refractometer.

One thing we learned recently is that calibrating with distilled/RODI water can skew the actual SG by several thousandths. I recently started using Pinpoint 1.0264 (35 ppt) calibration solution and found my SG was at 1.021-22 instead of the 1.026 I thought it was. After Pinpoint calibration I put some distilled water on the refractometer and it actually read below zero.
Dave
 
I have a TropicMarin hydrometer, about 12" long, and measures to 4 decimal places. Supposed to be lab grade, but I use a refractometer.

One thing we learned recently is that calibrating with distilled/RODI water can skew the actual SG by several thousandths. I recently started using Pinpoint 1.0264 (35 ppt) calibration solution and found my SG was at 1.021-22 instead of the 1.026 I thought it was. After Pinpoint calibration I put some distilled water on the refractometer and it actually read below zero.
Dave

Hmmmmm...so it really looks like both are prone to error if special care isn't taken to limit mistakes.
 
I would like to find a scientific article comparing the two. I have heard these arguments before, viz. "my hygrometer is .004 off," but I am not convinced that it isn't the refractometer that is off. How do you know which is off? You might have miscalibrated the refractometer.
 
Refractometer and anyone but sybon. Had to calibrate that piece of junk everytime I used it. I have checked my new cheap one several times and has not needed adjustment in almost 3 months.
 
Its all in what you trust and I trust my Refractometer more than the old swing arm.
 
I have a TropicMarin hydrometer, about 12" long, and measures to 4 decimal places. Supposed to be lab grade, but I use a refractometer.

One thing we learned recently is that calibrating with distilled/RODI water can skew the actual SG by several thousandths. I recently started using Pinpoint 1.0264 (35 ppt) calibration solution and found my SG was at 1.021-22 instead of the 1.026 I thought it was. After Pinpoint calibration I put some distilled water on the refractometer and it actually read below zero.
Dave

I use Randy's DIY calibration solution. I also checked it against Pinpoint.
 
IMO a calibrated hydrometer(by refract) works great and is much faster to test. I've never had a problem in 3 years and salinity is always the same
 
I work in an animal hospital and we use refractometers for blood and urine. What I usually do is just take some water to my work and test it there lol.
 
I think if you have a FO tank a hydrometer is OK, except if you have to go hypo for an Ich outbreak then I think a refractometer is a necessity. I used to have an old Tropic Marin hydrometer that I used to use with success, but you had to make sure there weren't any micro bubbles attached, and you had to temperature correct, I broke it during a move one day. I also have two IO swing arm type hydrometers, that I use at my mixing station for rough estimates. Both of the IO hydrometers are kept clean, but both give me different readings. So, if accuracy is important, there is no doubt in my mind that a proplerly calibrated refractometer, or pinpoint monitor is best.
 
Hydrometers should be pulled off the market. High or low salinity is a really preventable way from losing your reef.

Couldn't agree more one if the worst most unreliable products used in this hobby....
 
I figure if I'm going to put this much money into a reef the cost of a refractometer is a tiny drop in the bucket...
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%

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