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As long as you're making sure to keep your salinity in line remembering to add RODI to replace evaporation at a ratio applicable to your tank, you should be fineWas wondering if i dose 110 mills of salt water everyday, and dose the same amount of old water out will i run into any issues down the line! 3 year old mixed reef 200 gallons!!?
What's you're describing is what we call AWC (auto water chabge). And it's been dubbed the easy way to conduct water changes.Was wondering if i dose 110 mills of salt water everyday, and dose the same amount of old water out will i run into any issues down the line! 3 year old mixed reef 200 gallons!!?
Yeah but adds up overtime! Dont want to eventually raise salt!This is okay, and an application is:
Auto Water Change Systems
Bulk Reef Supply - Saltwater Aquarium Supplies for Reef Tankswww.bulkreefsupply.com
110 mL / 200 gal = 0.01%
The change is very minimal.
TyAs long as you're making sure to keep your salinity in line remembering to add RODI to replace evaporation at a ratio applicable to your tank, you should be fine
I'm not quite understanding what you're asking.Yeah but adds up overtime! Dont want to eventually raise salt!
I'm not quite understanding what you're asking.
If you remove 1L of 35ppt old salt and replace it with 1L of 35ppt new salt, you're not riasing or lowering your salinity.
Their issue you might be thinking of is as the water in the tank starts to evaporate the salinity concentration starts to rise unless you replenish what's being evaporated with fresh water.
The awc doesn't negate the need for an ato (auto top off) you'll still need to address evaporation.
Good extrapolation. Definitely worth discussing, the minute changes in salinity is definitely something to be aware of. Weekly inspections of salinity to ensure you're not tracking far off of desired point is not a bad idea. Depending on the tank volume more frequent inspections might be necessary.I think they are talking about error differences between rate_in and rate_out, because of small differences in calibration. However, this can be corrected with salinity verification every several weeks. The error over weeks for a 200 gal aquarium at 110 mL/day would be likely not perceivable.
If you mean - you're going to take 110 ml of tank water out every day - and replace it with 'fresh' saltwater, you will still have to account for evaporation. However, using this method - especially if the fresh water has a slightly lower specific gravity, that will help mitigate the issue. If you don't replace at least some fresh water - the SG will (albeit slowly) increase. But - I'm confused because the terms you're using are not 'usual'. I.e. you do not dose 'saltwater'. You're basically doing a daily water change - again I might be misunderstanding your comment - Best wishes - hope this helpsWas wondering if i dose 110 mills of salt water everyday, and dose the same amount of old water out will i run into any issues down the line! 3 year old mixed reef 200 gallons!!?
Part of the the problem IMHO - is that OP isn't framing is question to have only 1 answer. - it will eventually cause a raise in salinity if done exactly as he asked the question. Totally agree - there has to be some accounting for evaporation. And - a 110 ml (0.0290589 gallon) daily water change in a 200 gallon tank to me is throwing money down the drain for as others have said - an imperceptible benefit?I'm not quite understanding what you're asking.
If you remove 1L of 35ppt old salt and replace it with 1L of 35ppt new salt, you're not riasing or lowering your salinity.
Their issue you might be thinking of is as the water in the tank starts to evaporate the salinity concentration starts to rise unless you replenish what's being evaporated with fresh water.
The awc doesn't negate the need for an ato (auto top off) you'll still need to address evaporation.