Did someone tell you, that you needed one?so the question is why do i need a tds meter
Agreed.an ec meter or tds meter are pretty much the same thing, and all they do is give you an idea about the strength of your nutrient solution, they just use a different scale to do the same thing. i have a decent one, but i don't use it a lot anymore, i went to the jack's 3-2-1- system, and i know how strong it is by how much i put in it, and i can tailor it to my needs. the only thing you really need one for is if you're running hydro with a reservoir, it's a good idea to know just how strong your solution is, because that tells you what your plants are doing, same thing with a ph meter, good idea to keep track of and adjust your ph as needed, as both e.c. and ph will fluctuate as your plants feed
thank you i just bought one will be testing itan ec meter or tds meter are pretty much the same thing, and all they do is give you an idea about the strength of your nutrient solution, they just use a different scale to do the same thing. i have a decent one, but i don't use it a lot anymore, i went to the jack's 3-2-1- system, and i know how strong it is by how much i put in it, and i can tailor it to my needs. the only thing you really need one for is if you're running hydro with a reservoir, it's a good idea to know just how strong your solution is, because that tells you what your plants are doing, same thing with a ph meter, good idea to keep track of and adjust your ph as needed, as both e.c. and ph will fluctuate as your plants feed
If nothing else, test your tap water with it, and see what you're working with.thank you i just bought one will be testing it
I do guess. I like to see how far off I am from what the meters are saying, lol.In hydro how can you tell what's happening with nutrient ec/tds and run off ec/tds without a meter, do you guess?
I give you shit because you are growing in coco, not soil and feed charts are guidelines, not gospel. I'm not saying use it religiously, but you should have a pretty firm grasp of what the numbers are and eliminate the "guesswork".I don't use one either. My boy @trychrome breaks my balls over it. I did have one when I first started growing but it was a "cheapazon" meter that quickly broke, was never replaced, and I use GH trio so I'm not worried about guesswork. Their "levels" are listed online (and on the bottle i think) and I can do the math on paper if I needed to.
I'm growing closet weed, for the sole purpose of not having to buy dispensary boof. I'm not entering my shit in the Cannabis Cup. I'm not worried about optimizing potential as long as my results are satisfactory, and they are. I'm not "winging it" in the sense that I'm following a manufacturer recipe, and reducing it.I give you shit because you are growing in coco, not soil and feed charts are guidelines, not gospel. I'm not saying use it religiously, but you should have a pretty firm grasp of what the numbers are and eliminate the "guesswork".
Do you factor in the TDS already present in your water and adjust the nutrient levels accounting for that? And if you're not, how can you even be sure, based on your "winging it" method that the numbers are even close?
And when you encounter problems like you recently have, how do you diagnose the issue?I'm growing closet weed, for the sole purpose of not having to buy dispensary boof. I'm not entering my shit in the Cannabis Cup. I'm not worried about optimizing potential as long as my results are satisfactory, and they are. I'm not "winging it" in the sense that I'm following a manufacturer recipe, and reducing it.
thank youIf nothing else, test your tap water with it, and see what you're working with.