just leave him in, that what he can start to get acumulated as you add the salt and its not a huge shock to him
FishDog;2881637; said:Also, fully dissolve the salt in a bucket of warm water before adding to the tank. You don't want to just dump the salt in as it will burn the ray when it sits on the bottom.

FishDog;2881634; said:Nothing big or exciting you need to do to convert your ray to salt water. You can keep all the same filtration. I would figure up how much salt you need to make it fully saltwater and add 1/4 of the amount each week until it is full salt. I would buy a good hydrometer (i think that is what they are) that measures the specific gravity of the water. This tells you how much salt you have. The only thing to remember with salt is you have to add it back every water change.
tat2dfishguy;2881663; said:thanks for the info. i think i'm going to switch the tank over to saltwater. i've been wanting to have a saltwater tank for awhile now. after i have it all converted to salt , would it be ok to start adding alittle live rock and mabe a few bigger saltwater fish?? or should i just keep it sand and just him in the tank?