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- Jun 16, 2019
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Hi there - I’m really struggling to find a Phosphate test kit that is accurate and reliable
I have used almost all the phosphate test kits over the years (Red Sea, tropic Marin, etc.) and I have consistently found them to be serviceable at best and useless at worst — the best I’ve used are the following but there are still issues with each:
-Salifert - easy to perform, widely used, too hard to read at low levels which makes me skeptical
-Hanna - Inconsistent results; I also do not trust the powder packs, I went to great lengths to extract all powder from the packs in a consistent manner ( dumping onto a piece of paper and using a small funnel to add) but i still do not feel confident that I’m consistently getting the same amount of reagent powder for each test
-Elos High Resolution (HR) - I thought this was the best one (easy to read and perform) however I was basically always reading near zero, even when testing water I knew to be elevated (e.g. let a piece of food sit overnight). Also this test kit has become really hard to find in the US so I can’t even re-order at this point.
Basically my issue at this point is that Im finding it hard to believe that any hobby grade test kit is able to accurately resolve at the .01-.1 range that we are interested in.
I even looked to the more expensive lab grade options Hach and Lamotte — lamotte has discontinued their low range version and now only offers a test that is in .1 increments, and Hach only offers .1 increments as well — If these more “lab grade” companies can only offer a .1 resolution why would cheap hobby grade kits be able to consistently resolve lower?
Essentially my problems come down to:
1. Is there a reliable test kit out there capable of consistently testing in the range of .01-.1
2. If not, then is the commonly stated target range of .01-.1 even relevant, are we just deluding ourselves into thinking that we can even test at this level?
Anyone have any insights? at this point I’m basically done testing phosphate and relying on ICP tests every month or two.
I’m just frustrated that phosphate is commonly stated as one of the most important indicators to test in our aquariums, but there does not seem to be a reliable test kit out there to measure…
Thanks!
John
I have used almost all the phosphate test kits over the years (Red Sea, tropic Marin, etc.) and I have consistently found them to be serviceable at best and useless at worst — the best I’ve used are the following but there are still issues with each:
-Salifert - easy to perform, widely used, too hard to read at low levels which makes me skeptical
-Hanna - Inconsistent results; I also do not trust the powder packs, I went to great lengths to extract all powder from the packs in a consistent manner ( dumping onto a piece of paper and using a small funnel to add) but i still do not feel confident that I’m consistently getting the same amount of reagent powder for each test
-Elos High Resolution (HR) - I thought this was the best one (easy to read and perform) however I was basically always reading near zero, even when testing water I knew to be elevated (e.g. let a piece of food sit overnight). Also this test kit has become really hard to find in the US so I can’t even re-order at this point.
Basically my issue at this point is that Im finding it hard to believe that any hobby grade test kit is able to accurately resolve at the .01-.1 range that we are interested in.
I even looked to the more expensive lab grade options Hach and Lamotte — lamotte has discontinued their low range version and now only offers a test that is in .1 increments, and Hach only offers .1 increments as well — If these more “lab grade” companies can only offer a .1 resolution why would cheap hobby grade kits be able to consistently resolve lower?
Essentially my problems come down to:
1. Is there a reliable test kit out there capable of consistently testing in the range of .01-.1
2. If not, then is the commonly stated target range of .01-.1 even relevant, are we just deluding ourselves into thinking that we can even test at this level?
Anyone have any insights? at this point I’m basically done testing phosphate and relying on ICP tests every month or two.
I’m just frustrated that phosphate is commonly stated as one of the most important indicators to test in our aquariums, but there does not seem to be a reliable test kit out there to measure…
Thanks!
John