Thanks Al, great thread-7.5oz SOG baby cured and jarred fathered by 250watt dual spectrum bulb. I am a convert. And, bugger the UV.
well done, great work.
you da man al b fuct(yes that was a promotion, lol)! why hasnt this been stickied yet???
Thanks for the praise, but on a lot of days, I don't feel like 'da' man, but rather '
DUH' man.
I absolutely do get it wrong from time to time. Go back through this thread in its entirety and you'll catch me out a couple of times.
This thread probably doesn't need to be sticky- with as much activity as this thread sees (over 47,000 reads at last look), it sorta stickies itself.
ok i have a list of questions for you, sorry... you can answer after you do your manicuring, cloning, repotting, or w/e else. i just got around to reading the whole thing, and cant thanks you enough for sharing.
do you think that your flood tables create enough moisture to create a PM(p mildew) problem? i just dont know how much h20 evaporates after one gets flooded.
Thanks for the thanks.
The flood tables are only flooded for about 3-5 mins, 2x per day. The nute tanks are open and thus a constant source of evaporation, but to cover them would create a fungus, mould and bacteria trap. Much more significant sources of moisture in the air are evaporation directly from the media and especially from the plants' leaves. I'm working with a rather small airmass for the number of plants, but I do have means to cut the humidity and also massive exhaust ventilation capacity.
do you think one gallon grow bags would do the trick instead of pots? do you think they are of similar volume?
No, I would not recommend grow bags. I use individual pots of media because it allows me to pick up and move plants within the op to even out growth and for maintenance like spraying, etc. Grow bags, which contain media for several plants, limit plant mobility. I also don't think grow bags are intended for flood & drain systems. I'll suggest they'll be more expensive than bulk media as well.
Not sure about the volume of my 175mm dia x 175mm tall pots, but I'm sure you can math out the volume of a cylinder (or find an online calculator to do it for you).
you said that you've tried aeroponics and you had problems with it, what happened again?
My aero system created mist with air stones and bubble curtains in a common tank, above which the plants were suspended in netpots full of clay pellets. Air bubbles breaking the rez surface created the mist droplets. An air pump failure killed a bunch of plants. I (re) converted the system to flood operation in pots of absorbent media to prevent a recurrence.
also do you have to clean the misters once every two days, say from using using GH flora series nutes? i was thinking about doing my own aero build but after reading this thread im more poised to try E&F now... is aero that touchy/ messes up alot? i know if power goes out then your plants are in jeopardy, but other than that what are some drawbacks?
All nutrient solns will leave a nute crust buildup when allowed to dry on a surface or when forced through a small aperture. All of 'em, no way around it. The mineral salts in nutrients are solids when you take away the water.
If your aero system creates mist by moving water through a spray nozzle, crust will accumulate unless cleaned pretty much every other day.
Small apertures can also be clogged by any particulate matter loose in the reservoir. If you're going to pump water rather than air for an aero system, a suitable filter on the water pump inlet is a pretty good idea.
how bad is chlorine/tap water for your plant/roots?
It's not bad at all. Chlorination as applied in municipal water systems does not hurt plants. I don't know where this idea got started. Chlorination is your friend. It keeps pathogens suppressed while the water is in the reticulation system and also for the first 2-4 days standing in an open tank. Yibbayabba about reverse-osmosis, distilled or other fancy water for cannabis plants is a total (and expensive) wank. Tapwater is fine... unless your taps are connected to a bore water of very poor quality, with high salinity or high mineral salt (esp limestone) content. I've never seen a problem in any hydroponic op caused by municipal water.
i did a little breeding(or at least am trying to) with a couple plants and was curious to hold long does it normally take for the hairs to change color after the pistols conceive pollen? kinda off the subject, and i know you mostly deal with clones, but it seems like you know everything about herb.
"pistols conceive pollen"
um... what?
If you're asking how long it should take for calyxes to brown off after being pollinated, probably within a few days or so.
should/do you have to ph your water when flushing? i know you dont flush but hypothetically speaking, does it make a difference what the ph is? there are no nutes to be absorbed so i wouldnt see a reason for getting the ph to optimal level.
I think you're right. It'd save you about 20ml of pHDown per 125L of nute soln if you didn't use it. However, 2L of pHDown only costs about $10. 20ml of the stuff is worth 10 cents.
what are your res temps? what do you think the highest acceptable temps are for your set up b4 you start to see negative effects? you dont have to worry about DO as much because you add h2o2. do you think if your res temps were lower that it would make a positive effect on your yield?
I have no idea what my res temps are, never have measured them. My roots are not dangling in my res tanks; it's not a terribly useful measurement for a flood system.
how many gph is your pumps?
No idea.I have some of the very smallest, cheapest ones on the shelf at the hydro shop, which would perhaps be 140L/hr and a couple other bigger ones. All they need to do is fill the flood trays to the overflow tube level in 3-5 minutes, 2x per day. Flow rate for pumps in a flood system is not a critical issue.
last but not least.....................when are you going to write a grow bible? hehe.
I thought that's what I'm doing now!