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The digital salinity meter is an accurate device used to measure the
salt concentration in a test water sample. Salinity meters are essential
for;
- People who own salt water pools or spas
- Farmers wishing to test ground or dam water for salinity prior
to using it for irrigation
- People who own a marine (salt water) aquarium
- Laboratories and hospitals

Digital Salinity Meter
How to Use the Salinity Meter
- Dip the probe into the liquid to be measured.
- Press the ON button.
- Stir the meter to get rid of bubbles, until the display becomes
stable.
- Read the figure from the display, which is salinity in parts per
hundred.
- Rinse the meter with distilled water and blot dry after each
use.
Sampling and Testing Tips for Farmers testing Bore Water or
Dam Water
Measuring water salinity will indicate if it is safe to use the water
for irrigation. You may be limiting plant growth and importing salts
onto your farm without realising the cause. Measuring groundwater
salinity will show how salty your surface soil is likely to become if
the watertable
rises close to the surface.
You should regularly test groundwater samples from bores and
piezometers; and surface water from drains, creeks, dams, bay water,
seeps and discharge sites.
The digital salinity meter is accurate enough to determine the
salinity of water for most farm purposes. Alternatively, a sample can be
sent to a laboratory for testing and analysis if the water
will be used for household purposes or livestock. Note that although a
water salinity test is easy,
testing a soil sample is a more reliable assessment of the amount of
salt actually affecting crops and pastures. Surface water tests provide
a reading that is only accurate at the time of testing. The salinity can
change sharply in a short space of time, so test water salinity
regularly. For example, evaporation can concentrate salts, and rainfall
can dilute them. Also, slugs of particularly salty water can flow down
rivers and creeks. Groundwater salinity tends to remain more constant in
the short term.
- Make sure that you mix the water thoroughly before taking a
sample to test.
- Rinse the sample container with the sample water before
collection.
- When sampling from a dam: collect a sample from any channel
entry points, and at several other locations around the dam. Avoid
collecting muddy sediment.
- When sampling from a channel, creek or river: try to collect
sample from the middle of the streamflow and near your pump intake.
- When sampling from a bore: collect a sample from a turbulent
area near the outlet pipe, after pumping for at least 30 minutes.
- When sampling from a testwell: try to bail out as much of the
water already in the testwell, and allow fresh groundwater to flow
in (because some water in the testwell will have evaporated,
concentrating the salts in the remaining water and giving an
artificially high reading).
- The salinity meter should read zero when held in the air. If it
doesn’t, the meter needs to be calibrated (refer to the instructions
thst come with the meter).
- If the salinity is out of the range of the meter, samples can be
diluted by a fixed amount. For example, mixing a sample with an
equal volume of distilled water will halve the total salinity.
Double the reading to find the true salinity of the sample.
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