"pH lockout does not exist"

crimsonecho

Well-Known Member
I gave the guy like 3 outs
if you’re gonna keep dragging this shit out after you spazzed over your keyboard lets call it what it is you gave 3 non-answers to a question and called for your supervisor and then completely lost it but i guess hurling insults is the only way you can make up for your battered ego so, as you were :)
 

mudballs

Well-Known Member
if you’re gonna keep dragging this shit out after you spazzed over your keyboard lets call it what it is you gave 3 non-answers to a question and called for your supervisor and then completely lost it but i guess hurling insults is the only way you can make up for your battered ego so, as you were :)
My ego is just fine...think urs got roughed up tho
 

Samwell Seed Well

Well-Known Member
if you’re gonna keep dragging this shit out after you spazzed over your keyboard lets call it what it is you gave 3 non-answers to a question and called for your supervisor and then completely lost it but i guess hurling insults is the only way you can make up for your battered ego so, as you were :)
Muds normally very reserved but he broke his code to educate us... lets appreciate it.
 

crimsonecho

Well-Known Member
Muds normally very reserved but he broke his code to educate us... lets appreciate it.
yeah after giving 3 non-answers and calling for his supervisor a couple of times and him spazzing out was funny to me i can picture him getting angry and his eyes are red with rage and his veins are popping yeah i appreciate it deeply
 

Gregshed

Well-Known Member
There are enough bases in soils to neutralise any acids from water and nutrients, fertilizer is also a play of acids and bases. Let's face it you don't need to pH in soil unless your acid ppm is way of the chart crazy high and that's not going to be tap water is it.

Hydro is more a question of availability so water with too much swing on the final solution will be an issue.

It's really not hard to work out an answer but if you must buy a meter and do all that crap in soil it's not going to hurt until you add too much it could overpower the strong buffer.

Plants regulate their internal pH like we do, that's not really got much to do with it since I don't turn acidic if my drinking water is pH 5.

The guy in the video was right but his explanation could have been way more in-depth. It wasn't so it became a debate.
 
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