Hi Cheli,

Not to be argumentative with Ole Bob but for practical purposes, you can 
measure the ionic content of your CS fairly closely with the Hanna PWT meter.   
It is a conductance meter and when you apply the correction factor, it relates 
quite well.  We routinely have samples measured using the atomic absorption 
spectrophotometry method and then correlate those readings to our PWT results.  
It is always quite repeatable.  We check with 3 PWT's to average the reading.  
Not as accurate as Bobs method but very inexpensive over the long haul.  It 
will give you thousands of readings and you only need to change batteries 
occasionally.  The meter is $44.50 (factory price).  It is temperature 
compensated and is accurate to + - 2% of full scale so it isn't off more than 2 
parts at any reading.  It reads from 0 to 99.9 uS (microsiemens) so it can 
measure your water first and then the CS afterward for a PPM determination.

This sounds like a commercial for us but the question begged to be answered.  
There is more than one way to measure CS and this is an inexpensive way for the 
general user.  The unit can be seen at our website by clicking on 
www.silvergen.com/ppm.htm  Specifications for the unit are also on this page.

I hope Mike doesn't take umbrage at this blatant advertisement but newbies need 
to know of the various options.

Regards to all,

Trem
www.silvergen.com

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Cheli Anne 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, August 18, 2001 4:25 PM
  Subject: CS>ppm tester


  What is a good way to test ppm?  I have a Hanna TDS 1 tester, but it seems
  VERY inaccurate if color is any indicator.  The accuracy range is also very
  large.  Is there something that can be used that is accurate, yet
  inexpensive?  Cheli


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Cheli Anne 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, August 18, 2001 4:25 PM
  Subject: CS>ppm tester


  What is a good way to test ppm?  I have a Hanna TDS 1 tester, but it seems
  VERY inaccurate if color is any indicator.  The accuracy range is also very
  large.  Is there something that can be used that is accurate, yet
  inexpensive?  Cheli


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