sjfishguy
Active member
Great point about temperature! The amount of water used in a refractometer (a drop or two) is so small, that it is calibrated at room temperature. For example, your tank is 80oF. You take out two drops and put them on your refractometer- it takes less than 30 seconds for the water temp to reach the temp of the refractometer. You calibrated it at the same temp (room temp) and therefore you now have an ACCURATE specific gravity reading. Temperature changes the density of water, and saltwater for that matter, so you must take readings at a the same temperature at which your instument was calibrated. So your "paperwork" says it is accurate at 77oF (I still dont know why I need paperwork, but whatever), but at any other temperature, its off. You can do a conversion or let the large volume of water (relative to two drops) to cool to room temperature, or you can get a refractometer.
And if you say a a hydrometer, esp a floating one, is easier to use than a refractometer, I agree, you have never used both.
And if you say a a hydrometer, esp a floating one, is easier to use than a refractometer, I agree, you have never used both.