Here's one for you...
I have a customer who maintains the live lobster tank at a supermarket. They are provided salt mix that's for use with food fish/crustaceans, and she's trying to sort out the the tank, there was a problem with it in her absence when she went on vacation recently.
I encouraged her to buy a refractometer, but that didn't fly so she bought a hydrometer (cheaper)... Refractometers can compensate for temperature, but hydrometers don't.
Now we are trying to figure out the specific gravity of the tank, factoring in the temperature, which is 48 degrees Fahrenheit.
I've googled around and I cannot find a conversion chart that goes that low.
Can anybody point me in the right direction?
Jenn
I have a customer who maintains the live lobster tank at a supermarket. They are provided salt mix that's for use with food fish/crustaceans, and she's trying to sort out the the tank, there was a problem with it in her absence when she went on vacation recently.
I encouraged her to buy a refractometer, but that didn't fly so she bought a hydrometer (cheaper)... Refractometers can compensate for temperature, but hydrometers don't.
Now we are trying to figure out the specific gravity of the tank, factoring in the temperature, which is 48 degrees Fahrenheit.
I've googled around and I cannot find a conversion chart that goes that low.
Can anybody point me in the right direction?
Jenn