Is there a conversion for microsiemens to PPM conductivity. Thanks Phil Photography by Gooch's www.goochs.com <http://www.goochs.com> > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-apisto@admin.listbox.com > [mailto:owner-apisto@admin.listbox.com]On Behalf Of IDMiamiBob@aol.com > Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2000 3:42 AM > To: apisto@listbox.com > Subject: Re: Water Chemistry > > > In a message dated 11/25/00 6:23:10 PM Mountain Standard Time, > sales_info@pacific.net.ph writes: > > > One item that I did not get much information on was > > Conductivity of water, how much is high conductivity and what is > > considered low conductivity? Could you also give me example > by means of > > numbers so that I could be guided? > > > I'm not an expert on conductivity. I have heard reports from > some who have > collected in the Amazon that conductivity tends to run from > 10microsiemens to > 40 microsiemens at various collection sites for apistos. IF you have a > de-ionizer, a conductivity tester and a means to check hardness, you can > build your own chart and then equate hardness to a given > conductivity reading. > > Bob Dixon > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This is the apistogramma mailing list, apisto@listbox.com. > For instructions on how to subscribe or unsubscribe or get help, > email apisto-request@listbox.com. > Search http://altavista.digital.com for "Apistogramma Mailing > List Archives"! > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the apistogramma mailing list, apisto@listbox.com. For instructions on how to subscribe or unsubscribe or get help, email apisto-request@listbox.com. Search http://altavista.digital.com for "Apistogramma Mailing List Archives"!