hmspradlin
New member
Can I get some recommendations for a refractometer that is decent price? Thanks!
I have the $30 one from premium aquatics. Nice easy to read and much easier to see than the Red Sea. I have had many in my old age and this one is as good as one I had years ago.
Actually the Milwaukee Instrument Refractometer is not accurate at all.
Its has error margin of 0.002. What does that mean?
If the meter reads 1.026.
It can be off from 1.024 up to 1.028 and still be within spec of the unit.
Better off have a normal Refractometer and do the offset calibration at 1.026. It will be a lot more accurate then that digital meter.
Any Refractometer on market can do this, if used with a calibration fluid to calibrate it. At this point, you want to find a good Refractometer that has good nice readable display.
There are digital meters (MISCO AQUAR-H2O) with accuracy of 0.0005
If the meter reads 1.026.
It can be off from 1.0255 up to 1.0265 and still be within spec of the unit.
Its not cheap, if you are going to test something make sure its accurate.
Yea? You have data for this?
Why so angry bro?
The manual refractors are subjective, digital is objective.
Your link has the data.
I am in a good mood, so no clue why you think I am angry.
Always been a straight shooter, its never personal.
Yes manual refractors are subjective, but if you buy meter with good readable numbers and calibrate them with the offset its going to be good enough.
A lot people are not sure how calibration works, there are many ways of doing, only going to explain two types.
1) Offset only. You only do this, if you always run at one place of the range.
Example, if you keep salinity at 1.026. Then calibrating at 1.026 will make you accurate at 1.026 only. As soon you start to drift away from 1.026 you will lose the accuracy and it will happen real fast.
2) Offset, and Gain. This type is for to testing a range of measurement.
Example, If you monitor pH, then you want it to accurate from 7.8 to 8.4.
Most of the Refractometer , if not most found in our hobby and the Milwaukee Instrument Refractometer are not accurate with the Offset and Gain.
How do you do a Offset and Gain on a Refractometer and Milwaukee Instrument Meter?
By using DI water for your offset and the Refractometer, Milwaukee Instrument Meter will do the gain.
That is why these meters fail, they cannot adjust the gain correctly.