Siffy
New member
I've been putting off documenting this somewhere, so no time like the present.
It started with the last big water change I did using Instant Ocean salt. My Alk was very high at over 6 meq/L and Ca and Mg were low, somewhere around 320ppm and 1000ppm iirc. That just got me really frustrated with IO (and my test kit, to be honest). Either my bucket had gone bad or was from a bad batch, the Alk out of it had always been off. So it was time for a change.
I've read of many people mixing salts from IO with Oceanic or Kent or Reef Crystals with them, but I wanted to take it a step further. At first I decided I wanted to blend at least 4 or 5 salts from different manufacturers. So I started shopping around and kept saying "I wouldn't mind using that salt". And this is what I ended up with.
Yes, that's 10 ~50g packages of salt. In alphabetical order, I'm now using,
Coralife
H2Ocean Pro
Kent
Oceanic
Oceanpure
Red Sea Coral Pro
Reef Crystals
SeaChem Reef
Tropic Marin
Tunze Reef Excel
for water changes and I'll be using the mixture for first fill of a new tank shortly.
All the salts are being used equally. To make the first ~30g brute of NSW I put in 1 1/2 cups from each brand. It was pretty time consuming with the first batch, but for future batches I'm thinking about filling multiple 1 gallon bags/buckets with dry salt and storing them until needed.
The point of this was mainly to reduce the risk of getting a bad batch of salt. Any 1 salt can only have a 10% impact good or bad on my final mixture. Plus one of the initial discussions I had with a fellow reefer about trying this were also about balance. His thoughts were that over time using just 1 brand of salt will likely leave your tank deficient in some aspects. Things we don't test for so can't be certain. The theory is brand A and brand B (no matter which) will complement each other since they both add things the other doesn't. So far I've done 3 10% water changes with the new mixture and polyp extension as a guide shows me positive results. So at least the new water is better than what was already in the tank.
With the next batch I'm considering sending a sample of the new water to AWT (AquariumWaterTesting.com) for professional testing since I barely trust my salifert kits anymore. I have 2 alk kits and one will read around 2 meq/L and the other will be close to 5 meq/L on the same water sample.
So, thoughts, comments, questions, suggestions?
It started with the last big water change I did using Instant Ocean salt. My Alk was very high at over 6 meq/L and Ca and Mg were low, somewhere around 320ppm and 1000ppm iirc. That just got me really frustrated with IO (and my test kit, to be honest). Either my bucket had gone bad or was from a bad batch, the Alk out of it had always been off. So it was time for a change.
I've read of many people mixing salts from IO with Oceanic or Kent or Reef Crystals with them, but I wanted to take it a step further. At first I decided I wanted to blend at least 4 or 5 salts from different manufacturers. So I started shopping around and kept saying "I wouldn't mind using that salt". And this is what I ended up with.

Yes, that's 10 ~50g packages of salt. In alphabetical order, I'm now using,
Coralife
H2Ocean Pro
Kent
Oceanic
Oceanpure
Red Sea Coral Pro
Reef Crystals
SeaChem Reef
Tropic Marin
Tunze Reef Excel
for water changes and I'll be using the mixture for first fill of a new tank shortly.
All the salts are being used equally. To make the first ~30g brute of NSW I put in 1 1/2 cups from each brand. It was pretty time consuming with the first batch, but for future batches I'm thinking about filling multiple 1 gallon bags/buckets with dry salt and storing them until needed.
The point of this was mainly to reduce the risk of getting a bad batch of salt. Any 1 salt can only have a 10% impact good or bad on my final mixture. Plus one of the initial discussions I had with a fellow reefer about trying this were also about balance. His thoughts were that over time using just 1 brand of salt will likely leave your tank deficient in some aspects. Things we don't test for so can't be certain. The theory is brand A and brand B (no matter which) will complement each other since they both add things the other doesn't. So far I've done 3 10% water changes with the new mixture and polyp extension as a guide shows me positive results. So at least the new water is better than what was already in the tank.

With the next batch I'm considering sending a sample of the new water to AWT (AquariumWaterTesting.com) for professional testing since I barely trust my salifert kits anymore. I have 2 alk kits and one will read around 2 meq/L and the other will be close to 5 meq/L on the same water sample.
So, thoughts, comments, questions, suggestions?