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PJ Diaz
It's not talked about much, but the long story short is with substances the elemental ppm is easy to find out with what we're given. The problem is the only way to measure the actual ppm is with lab analyses. So, we use "cheaper" meters to measure the same thing through EC that is the electrical conductivity of the mixtures different elements and then with a basic calculation (.500 or the 700 scale) to "determine" the ppm, wich is actually TDS, the total dissolved solids. The problem is the elements all give off a different "charge" depending on the ie: water quality. Add RO water to the calculations and there's no buffer that can hinder the results even more. PPM and EC are calculated through different means and therefore EC doesn't usually line up with the actual ppm numbers. We are trying a middleman attack to guess the EC (what our meters say) properly according to the actual ppm numbers. I know, it's weird but true.
A quick example, actual elemetal ppm of 5 grams a gallon mix is 400 ppm that we both mix, my meter says 550, yours says 600. We can both guage our systems by our meter numbers, but the real number would be 400 ppm no matter what our meters say. I personally have 3 meters that all show slightly different numbers of the same mix. When people say they use 1100 ppm i don't know if they mean the real ppm, tds their meter spits out, and wich scale their meter uses; EC basically the same thing.