Greengenes707
Well-Known Member
yes agree with all you stated.
standard fertilizer NPK expresses phosphorus as P2O5 and potassium as K20
so if you want to compare NPK ratios it would be nice to stick to standard fertilizer conventions.
regardless as that's just "a convention" I have actually seen the ph creep up that the OP is talking about.
But standard nutrient science breaks down into actual NPK in ppm or mmol.I always mean N, P2O5 and K2O when refering to NPK just because that is the standard in the US for packaging nutrients and I feel like I would be confusing people if I gave them true NPK. Giving them both seems to confuse people even more. I'm not disagreeing with your reasoning though.
When giving ratios, I always put the : between the values (like you) because NPK rating is percent by mass, but most people don't understand this distinction anyway.
Honestly if we were talking about available NPK, it would make more sense if the standard was NO3-, KH2PO4-, K+ since those are the most available ions. Too bad the standards don't make much sense, especially for hydro users.
I talk with a few university greenhouse guys still from the AT days. As well as all my text research...it's all actual NPK. Even old threads from cap's or jack. Or even the basics of lucas being 1:1:2 is it's actual npk.
Some examples...
http://www.greenhouse.cornell.edu/crops/factsheets/hydroponic-recipes.pdf
https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pdffiles/CV/CV21600.pdf
I am in the camp of providing enough Ca and Mg regardless of ratio if it's 3:1 up to 1:1. Plants have constantly shown signs of Mg for me, but not Ca, as long as I'm in the 105ppm+ of Ca. While Mg needs don't settle till ~80 to up to 95ppm of Mg with the same ~120 Ca.
I have been testing a high P mix the last few runs and it has been really good. Ups the Ca too though, so my ratio got bigger...interesting. I have ran with no epsom at all(~60ppm Mg and got deficiencies once plants got to a decent teen size.
And last note...I am in coco, my Ca and other cation needs get increased with slightly.