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Originally Posted by HighSeas
I've been doing some research on PH and TDS meters. Currently, I'm cross-eyed. I want something that can be calibrated and should probably get two separate meters. Does anyone have any suggestions and/or experience with these meters and like what they have?
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You are on the right track wishing to get only a meter that can be calibrated. I have seen many low cost "TDS meters", these can probably give you some idea if your electrical conductivity is increasing or decreasing. However without calibration, the number on the readout can't be considered an accurate value.
You may have noticed I said "electrical conductivity" rather than TDS. ALL meters that say they are TDS or salinity meters really are just measuring electrical conductivity (EC), and estimating TDS (or salinity) from the EC number. There are various online calculators that can easily convert from EC to TDS, also.
What I suggest is to get a catalog or go to a website that sells meters for water quality testing (examples would be Ben Meadows, Nasco Science, Hach, or Forestry Suppliers. Nasco offers some budget meters (under $60) that offer calibration (can't vouch for the durability of these meters, though).
The Ben Meadows and Forestry Suppliers sites show professional equipment; prices significantly higher, but you can use the info from those catalogs to check for deals on
used equipment off Ebay. Manufacturers I would look for on Ebay deals include Oakton, Hanna Instruments, Hach, Orion (or Thermo Orion). If shopping on Ebay, be sure the meter is complete (includes probe, etc.) and can be used as sold to you.
I have not mentioned pH but you can typically rely on pH test paper, pH monitoring kits, or looking for meters that combine pH and conductivity. The Hach website actually has a stick-type pH, temperature, conductivity, TDS, and salinity meter for $185 (product # 2519800), it can be calibrated, calibration standards sold separately. That is a really good price IMO.