My problem with color change is I find it very hard to detect. Always have, back to chemistry lab.I tend to trust a machine, however imperfect, over my imperfect optical analysis. I hear you both about the ColorQ, noted.
Now, does liquid CYA take a while to disperse, or should it be immediate?
Thanks!
Well, like a lot of men, I'm partially red-green color blind and, being a guy, I genetically programmed to only recognize 5 colors, so I usually ask my wife to double check my color determination. All in all, we do pretty good
Solid CYA is very slow to dissolve and can take up to a week before you'll register it on a test. Liquid CYA will disperse faster but I also believe it takes days before you'll see it show up.
Not sure how the ColorQ does it, but the Taylor method uses a reaction with melamine to form a finely dispersed suspension of melamine cyanurate which visually occluds a black dot at the bottom of a sample tube. I find it to be quite accurate a repeatable and it is my understanding that it is the "gold standard" for CYA testing. Strips are totally useless for CYA testing
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