yea both the same as already said but brackish uses tiny amounts compared to marine
Couldn't make the least difference. Instant Ocean, Reef Crystals, whatever is cheapest in your neighbourhood. For brackish water, obsessing about the exact ratio of trace elements is irrelevant. Buy in bulk to save more money, and don't over-feed the fish if you want to do the least water changes.so then what would be the best salt to use.. brand wise?
Almost certainly not worth using in an aquarium. Cooking salts *usually* have compounds added to improve the "flow" of the salt and in some countries to add trace elements. The iodine compounds in particular can be toxic to fish. As for salt for de-icing driveways and the like, there's no guarantees that solvents or other chemicals haven't been added, so those definitely shouldn't be used. Stick with marine aquarium salt.right now i just buy the little bags of 2lbs of salt for a dollar.. they arent labelled so what kind of salt is that. and should i continue to buy that or wouldi be better off just buyin a big 5 gallon bucket of instint reef salt or something of that sort?
Yep.so is what you're saying is my meter doesn't lie.. that the reading of that much salt added was correct and safe for my aquarium?
Accurate enough. Reef-keepers do rather obsess about the relative merits of hydrometers versus refractometers, but a properly used hydrometer is more than accurate enough for a brackish water aquarium. Just be sure you understand how to use one, and that you read the instructions properly, and keep it clean.how accurate are these little plastic meters with the needles that point out your sg?