Maybe your right, but if you come to find out that you are not in any circumstance to grow pot, then all you are left with are some buckets, a light, and some soil. Smaller investment. Plenty of people can't keep a cactus alive let alone weed. If you can get bud in soil, then make the larger investment in hydro.
I got to admit you have balls going straight into hydro, and your shit looks beautiful. But not so many people are as bold initially. Once they have confidence that they know the plant back and forth, the grow medium builds upon that. Im not talking about the growth characteristics in hydro or soil, Im taking about the growth characteristics of the plant itself. An N def. is an N def in soil or in hydro. If you misdiagnose in hydro, and think that it is a K def, or a cal def, you can make some bad soup real quick, and not only have a def, but a burn as well. Not that soil is any more forgiving, just a great tutorial to the live and times of said marijuana plant. Of course hydro can grow it faster, but also with much more prowess when it comes to equipment managing, all kinds of nutes and additives. I have no idea how much experience anyone on this forum has, so I just tell them my thought process.
All i know is that if you get a 5 gallon bucket with some holes drilled into it, a bag of soiless mix, some perlite, dolo lime, molasses, a pH/Moisture meter, a decent light of choice and some cheapo nutes. While watering and feeding within reason, then you get a plant that has a great lesson built into it for peanuts compared to the package needed for hydro.
I must concede that this is all assumption however. Hydro holds the same lessons, just for a higher initial investment.
How's it goin' hudson. I don't think that learning the growth characteristics of a plant grown in dirt is going to be extremely helpful in knowing how it will grow in hydro. Hydro can make the plant grow differently because of how fast it is and even make the shape of the leaves and buds look different, as can different nutrient lines. Plus every time you switch to a new strain you will have to learn the way it grows. I just feel like hydro is very strait forward. PH.....TDS.....that's about it, keep it in range. Res. temps, aeration and all that technical mumbojumbo is well and fine, but unless something is seriously out of wack, like 90 deg. water or something, then it's just ph and tds. I use drip clean by house and garden through the whole grow so I only have to flush at the end. I spend about 3 hours a week working on my water. It also seems to me that soil may be a little too slow and a little too slow reacting to deficiency corrections for the usual impatient beginner. They don't have the experience to know how much correction is enough and by the time the plant lets them figure it out it's time to harvest it. Maintaining medium ph in soil is just as technical as anything in hydro. Just get a good hydro nute line like H&G, Advanced, Canna, ect.. and follow their directions, it's extremely simple. They give you a week to week schedule. You may have to add a little Cal/Mag at some point but it's nothing too scientific. You'll see the affects of your deficiencies earlier but also your corrections.