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Well, that is interesting, but would be more meaningful if the same salt was used in both tests. After reading your report I went off reading about "salt". Seems that both salts are NaCl but there are apparently differences. Having said that, though, I'm not so sure how important it is to specifically use the canning/pickling salt. Of the types of salts the canning/pickling salt is supposed to be the quickest dissolving and have basically no additives (iodide, anti-caking, etc.,.). Kosher has been stated as having an anti-caking agent (but still is certified as kosher) and regular table salt has iodide, anti-caking agenst, dextrose, and ??? in it. Sea salts...all kinds of stuff.
There is also an issue of grain size (a teaspoon of big grain salt won't be as salty as a teaspoon of small grain salt...larger airspaces between the grains in the big grain teaspoon) and the ability of the salt to dissolve.
I'm no expert on salt (nor or calibrating hygrometers
) but stumbled upon this chef thread,
"Table salt (vs) sea salt (vs) kosher salt" where they were talking about salt in a pretty detailed conversation.
Here is a link to an article I pasted this past January into a thread regarding the salt method of calibration:
Calibrate Your Hygrometer - Two Methods This article is from a cigar website and humidity is very important in the storage of cigars (we're talking thousands of dollars worth of tobacco being stored in personal and business inventories). FWIW, the author states to use the easy dissolving canning/pickling salt, and specifically the Morton's brand.
It is interesting that your second test is apparently much different from your first. The question is it because of different substances/environment/whatever or because the hygrometer is flakey and giving inconsistent readings. ????
Isn't this fun!?
Ed