Medium pH Correction (Soil and Coco)

FluffsTravels

Well-Known Member
@Renfro and @DoubleAtotheRON Hey guys, both of you have mentioned in one thread or another about taking ph soil samples while the soil is dry. Is the Apera the only one that does this or does the Blue Lab do this as well? Is that the Apera 8500? I pick up my Blue Lab today but I may buy the Apera as well. Thank you.
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
@Renfro and @DoubleAtotheRON Hey guys, both of you have mentioned in one thread or another about taking ph soil samples while the soil is dry. Is the Apera the only one that does this or does the Blue Lab do this as well? Is that the Apera 8500? I pick up my Blue Lab today but I may buy the Apera as well. Thank you.
The Apera is a soil probe with a Swiss glass tip. You can stab the soil dry or wet. I prefer to test it right after feeding, and shoot for upper 6’s as your PH will tend to drop as the soil dries out. The Apera is also a liquid reader too.. I mix up my nutes, and then test the ph to make sure I’m at around 7. I’m in soil and I like to overshoot it just a bit so they are “in the zone” as they are eating.D77DE11E-4F70-419D-AF0D-BFEF995A5015.jpeg
 

DoubleAtotheRON

Well-Known Member
Gotcha. Thx. The Blue Lab is glass as well. I'll probably invest in the Apera as well. I believe this is the one you have in the pic: https://aperainst.com/ph8500-portable-ph-meter-kit-with-glp-data-logger-and-usb-data-output
Close!.. it’s this one.
 

Cvntcrusher

Well-Known Member
I need help fellas. I'm just starting to learn ph ec tds etc.



I am running 4 photos. 1 of them is receiving fox farms trio. The other 3 are receiving big blooms and buds.

When I put my calmag and FFT into my gallon of water, mix it all up, calibrate my PH meter & test ph of the mix. Its 5.8 so thats good since I'm in coco.

Now when I do my big blooms and buds mix. ( I even upped my feed this time before testing) it comes out at 4.6......

If I add more feed, im just going to burn my plants. So do I simply just need to add ph up and get he correct PH?
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
Now when I do my big blooms and buds mix. ( I even upped my feed this time before testing) it comes out at 4.6......

If I add more feed, im just going to burn my plants. So do I simply just need to add ph up and get he correct PH?
Sounds like those nutrients are more acidic. Definitely buffer it up. A silica product could be used as the pH buffer, all or in part. Generally add the silica product first according to the label and mix, then start adding and mixing in the nutrients. See where that gets you, if you need more then use a pH up buffer. 4.6 is definitely too low.

I really don't like having to use a pH up buffer but whaddya gonna do?
 

Cvntcrusher

Well-Known Member
Sounds like those nutrients are more acidic. Definitely buffer it up. A silica product could be used as the pH buffer, all or in part. Generally add the silica product first according to the label and mix, then start adding and mixing in the nutrients. See where that gets you, if you need more then use a pH up buffer. 4.6 is definitely too low.

I really don't like having to use a pH up buffer but whaddya gonna do?
Makes sense. I'll get some silica and try that out too
 

Cvntcrusher

Well-Known Member
Sounds like those nutrients are more acidic. Definitely buffer it up. A silica product could be used as the pH buffer, all or in part. Generally add the silica product first according to the label and mix, then start adding and mixing in the nutrients. See where that gets you, if you need more then use a pH up buffer. 4.6 is definitely too low.

I really don't like having to use a pH up buffer but whaddya gonna do?
Do you mind linking me to which silica I should buy via Amazon?
 

FluffsTravels

Well-Known Member
I know Power Si is recommended by many but is considered expensive. I think someone in this thread may have mentioned another brand. If not, look through this thread or go through Renfro's journal. A lot of great stuff in there.

I should update this with my outcome but I'm fried from working all day. Thanks again to those the gave insight, links and information when this thread was fresh.
 

macsnax

Well-Known Member
Checking and adjusting the pH of your root zone in soil or coco is a very important part of growing healthy plants. Often you will notice nutrient deficiencies despite the fact you know you have provided an ample feed at an appropriate pH level. When this happens it’s generally either unhealthy roots or something going on in the medium locking out the nutrients. This could be a salt buildup or it can be a pH related issue.

Runoff testing is unreliable and bad information is often worse than no information. Testing soil pH should be done with a reliable digital soil pH pen. The cheap analog meters with the long metal probe are not good for pH measurements, they are good for moisture and that it. You should test all plants as they are not always the same, do not rely on one test for all plants. I am showing an example of a correction on a plant that was off and showing signs of nutrient uptake issues.

For starters the medium is DNA Mills Coco Cork and I have found it likes to be at 6.5 (I know). The plant is a Romulan cut that I was given and was tossed into flower right at flip as an afterthought. The normal feed pH is 6.5 and each 10 gallon pot gets 2.5 gallons of water, currently every 8 hours for most plants including this one (she drinks).

I tested the coco and the starting number of 5.74 (too low for me).

6.5 minus 5.74 = 7.26. I adjusted my next feed accordingly and it measured 7.25.

5 minutes after feeding I tested again and the pH is at 6.71.

2 hours after feeding it tested at 6.62

6 hours after feeding it tested at 6.38

It generally drifts back down some and ends up a little below 6.5. The following feed is then adjusted as needed to walk it onto target range. If the situation persists then the medium may have some sort of pH buffer that’s slow release and you may have to combat this the whole grow.

The soil pH meter can also be used to detect your daily pH swings and use them to your advantage. Lets say you want 6.3 - 6.8. If you water at 6.8 and it drifts down to 6.3 between the next watering then thats great! If you started at 6.5 not so much as you end up at 6.1 (seen it happen). Not everyone's soil will have a pH swing, more beneficial bacteria seems to make the pH move around more but it's good to know if you do and use it to your advantage.

Images in the following post. FWIW I meant to put this in the General Growing section but messed up lol.
I think a lot of growers don't realize how drift works in a solution, especially if it's fresh made. The longer it sits the more it balances until it's stable. It causes them to compensate in the wrong way. There's a lot more to it though, depends on the nutrients, base water, temps, etc. I've been running the floraflex line lately and it is the most ph stable nute I've ever seen, whether ph'd right away or tomorrow.
 

Dapper_Dillinger

Well-Known Member
I need help fellas. I'm just starting to learn ph ec tds etc.



I am running 4 photos. 1 of them is receiving fox farms trio. The other 3 are receiving big blooms and buds.

When I put my calmag and FFT into my gallon of water, mix it all up, calibrate my PH meter & test ph of the mix. Its 5.8 so thats good since I'm in coco.

Now when I do my big blooms and buds mix. ( I even upped my feed this time before testing) it comes out at 4.6......

If I add more feed, im just going to burn my plants. So do I simply just need to add ph up and get he correct PH?
That would be what i dif if i was you.. i believe your getting the right ph reading
 

Dapper_Dillinger

Well-Known Member
I think a lot of growers don't realize how drift works in a solution, especially if it's fresh made. The longer it sits the more it balances until it's stable. It causes them to compensate in the wrong way. There's a lot more to it though, depends on the nutrients, base water, temps, etc. I've been running the floraflex line lately and it is the most ph stable nute I've ever seen, whether ph'd right away or tomorrow.
Hello friend where can i find more info as a well respected source of mine also uses these nutrients and in considering making the switch from foxfarm cultivation nation 2part soluble
 

macsnax

Well-Known Member
Hello friend where can i find more info as a well respected source of mine also uses these nutrients and in considering making the switch from foxfarm cultivation nation 2part soluble
There's not a ton of info about these nutrients out there yet. The floraflex website doesn't list crap for info either lol. Check their IG, search hash tags there too, the forums, etc. I've been using a magnetic stirrer to mix each part and then add to res. The stuff is a super clean solution, I was using MC before and it's a night and day difference on pH stability and cleanliness. I don't run their foliar, just a&b. Don't think I'll run they're bloom foliar, not until I know what's in it anyway.
 
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