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View Full Version : "Salinity" salt mixing problems!!


btuck887
01-16-2014, 10:33 PM
I purchased a large bucket of "salinity" salt from big als on Boxing Day. Does anyone use this and how do u mix it? Does it stay cloudy?

I have mixed up a few batches and not matter how long I keep it mixing for it stays cloudy, anyone else have this problem? After removing the power head for mixing the water becomes clear but I get a lot of sediment at the bottom of the bucket? Anyone know the reason for this or what I'm doing wrong?

Thanks

Coral Hoarder
01-16-2014, 10:45 PM
i ahve never used that salt but you may be adding to much or is the watter cold so it cant disolve ?

btuck887
01-16-2014, 10:46 PM
i ahve never used that salt but you may be adding to much or is the watter cold so it cant disolve ?

Not adding to much because the salinity is 1.025 and I warm the water up when mixing

pinkreef
01-16-2014, 10:49 PM
I checked on another site and others had the same problems
not mixing clear, residue on the side and bottom
one suggestion there was add a little at a time rather than the whole
measure at once.

MitchM
01-16-2014, 10:50 PM
I've used it in the past and the cloudiness is normal.
It can occur from mixing it too long, actually.
Bottom line, it's not a problem.
I don't use it anymore because it was not easy to find.
I switch now between H2O and Reefers best - whichever one is available at the time.
I also never heat my water change water.

btuck887
01-16-2014, 10:51 PM
I checked on another site and others had the same problems
not mixing clear, residue on the side and bottom
one suggestion there was add a little at a time rather than the whole
measure at once.

Ya I have done a little reading, every page says something a little different. Was just looking to see if someone around here had found a solution to the problem ha

Thanks for the suggestion!!

craigwmiller
01-16-2014, 11:04 PM
To avoid cloudiness (and precipitation), I've had the best luck with:

- no heater before mixing
- constant circulation during mixing
- not adding entire amount of salt at once (I mix ~40 gallons at a time, and I do it in about 3-4 chunks of adding salt, spacing the addition of salt by several hours)
- if your make-up water is still cloudy after 24 hours of mixing, and your salinity is good (I mix to 35ppt), it might just be cloudy and is likely okay to use.

btuck887
01-16-2014, 11:07 PM
To avoid cloudiness (and precipitation), I've had the best luck with:

- no heater before mixing
- constant circulation during mixing
- not adding entire amount of salt at once (I mix ~40 gallons at a time, and I do it in about 3-4 chunks of adding salt, spacing the addition of salt by several hours)
- if your make-up water is still cloudy after 24 hours of mixing, and your salinity is good (I mix to 35ppt), it might just be cloudy and is likely okay to use.



I'm starting to think my problem is adding the salt to fast.

After ur salt is mixed do u get a precipitate on the bottom?

mrhasan
01-16-2014, 11:09 PM
I'm starting to think my problem is adding the salt to fast.

After ur salt is mixed do u get a precipitate on the bottom?

Heat up the water first. Then add 1/2 + 1/2 amount 30mins to 1 hour apart and mix. No heater during mixing. And the residue it quite common, probably some binding agent or something, I get that even with H2ocean.

craigwmiller
01-16-2014, 11:13 PM
I'm starting to think my problem is adding the salt to fast.

After ur salt is mixed do u get a precipitate on the bottom?

No precipitation/film for most salts. Reef Crystals and Fluval leave behind some form of 'scum' after a few water changes, which I only attribute to being 'dirt' in the salt. Never caused me any issues though.


And mrhasan is correct, the heater in the bucket is the problem, not the water temperature while mixing :biggrin:

btuck887
01-16-2014, 11:17 PM
No precipitation/film for most salts. Reef Crystals and Fluval leave behind some form of 'scum' after a few water changes, which I only attribute to being 'dirt' in the salt. Never caused me any issues though.


And mrhasan is correct, the heater in the bucket is the problem, not the water temperature while mixing :biggrin:


So bring the water up to temp, remove the heater, add half the salt, mix for an hr then add the rest. How long do u leg it mix after that?

I have heard anywhere from a few hrs to 48

spit.fire
01-16-2014, 11:22 PM
I use salinity

I mix it the day before with the full amount all at once and leave it sit for 24hrs and it clears up

btuck887
01-16-2014, 11:24 PM
I use salinity

I mix it the day before with the full amount all at once and leave it sit for 24hrs and it clears up



Do u get a lot of precipitate at the bottom?

strauss
01-16-2014, 11:45 PM
I use the same but I mix it and use it within a few hours. It's always clear when added to tank but there is some residue in the bottom. Not much though.

btuck887
01-16-2014, 11:47 PM
I use the same but I mix it and use it within a few hours. It's always clear when added to tank but there is some residue in the bottom. Not much though.


Do u let it sit a few hrs before u use it or keep it constantly mixing up until u add it?

mrhasan
01-17-2014, 12:15 AM
Do u let it sit a few hrs before u use it or keep it constantly mixing up until u add it?

I always keep on mixing the salt till I use it (with powerhead).

spit.fire
01-17-2014, 12:17 AM
I always keep on mixing the salt till I use it (with powerhead).

+1

jamescyr
01-17-2014, 03:36 PM
Do more research!! Mix your salt as normal, put it in the tank and deal with the cloudiness for a short time. It states on the pale itself that it will be cloudy, as this is one of the only salt types that does not have a chemical in it to make it disolve faster! Instant ocean etc use a disolving agent to get rid of the cloudiness.

Speaking from experience and emails to the manufacturer directly.

Sucks. Bit outcome is much better.