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2007-06-20 08:20:52 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

6 answers

it usually averages out to about 1 1/4 cups per gallon, however you need to get to a specific gravity of 1.023 or as close as you can. The bag of salt should have directions on it however as was mentioned you need to get a hydrometer to be sure. Since you won't be able to house fish for a while usually when I set up my salt tank I will mix one 5 gallon bucket at a time. NEVER put water into the tank then put salt into it. mix it with the proper amount of dechlor and salt before adding to the tank.

Also, be sure you rinse your grave or sand well and put it in the dry tank before the water you can rearrange it later.

As always, any other questions feel free to post or email me directly.

Welcome to the wonderful world of salt water!

2007-06-23 08:01:11 · answer #1 · answered by danielle Z 7 · 1 2

You must use marine salt to make saltwater for a marine set-up. The tank should be at least a 30 gallon with special lighting and filtration. If you are using the proper salt, it will tell you right on the box how much to add.

If you have a salinity tester (and you should) it will read 1.025 when the proper specific density is reached by adding the correct salt product. Many tests for different attributes of saltwater aquariums are required frequently to keep marine tanks healthy. Many adjustments are made following the tests.

I suggest you do a lot more research on marine environments before putting salt into water and adding fish. It is nowhere near as easy as a freshwater tropical tank.

2007-06-20 08:34:59 · answer #2 · answered by 8 In the corner 6 · 0 0

Unlike in a freshwater tank you can't use table salt, but need "marine" salt. This is due to the fact marine salt contains a lot of things other than NaCl. You'll need specialized tests to test for specific gravity, and salt water test kits for pH.

2007-06-20 10:44:01 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

precisely equivalent in each gallon???? Er, it is all going to blend at the same time interior the tank, so the tank could have a uniform salinity no count the way you blend the water. even though it is extremely significant to blend the salt water formerly you placed it interior the tank, for motives I won't circulate into right here. Use a great bucket (a minimum of five gallons) or yet another great, water-tight container like a (clean) plastic trashcan as your blending container. no count the way you blend issues, you will nonetheless in all likelihood ought to alter the salinity as quickly as you have all the salt water interior the tank (although brackish-water fish can tolerate a lots, lots wider salinity selection than in simple terms marine fish can).

2016-11-07 01:16:43 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

This isn't somethingyou can measure by volume since salt compacts as it absorbs moisture. You need to get a hydrometer, which measures the amount of salt by changes in specific gravity (more salt makes things float - a hydrometer uses this principle to gauge the amount of salt by using a needle that rises or by markings along a weighted float).

You want to make up the water so it's 1.020-1.026 for fish, 1.024-1.026 for invertebrates (snails, corals, shrimp, crabs, etc.). The temperature of the water changes the specific gravity by 0.001 for every 10 degrees of temperature, so try and measure the water you mix at around room temperature.

2007-06-20 08:29:10 · answer #5 · answered by copperhead 7 · 1 0

you need to get a hydrometer, most pet shops will carry them, and the boxes have a rough estimate as to how much salt but you HAVE to test it

2007-06-20 18:48:08 · answer #6 · answered by michael_j_p_42503 3 · 0 0

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