Then if thats the case ALL of my plants would be dead if I didnt know anything.
You dont have to have the pH directly at a certain number.
Your advice is poor,
I do not have to explain for myself to you.
Look at the pH problem in the link you gave me dumb shit.
Its turning black and curling up.
Dont tell me im wrong,
as for I would not give anyone false advice unlike your doing.
Also look at the pH tables.
I doubt you even know what Im talking about.
Bro..
dont bullshit me, cause im not an idiot.
NoB
LMAO! Unbunch your panties. Where did anyone say you didn't know "anything." You gave bad advice, it is what it is. And I mean, I'm no grammar Nazi, but... Just read what you posted. It says more about you than I ever could.
This makes me laugh so hard. Not
because of the "cause." Not because im. It's because after all that you actually used "an" in front of idiot.
The reason pH related damage does not have one single symptom is because the pH can lock out just one, or many, elements. The lock up of elements as a result of pH imbalance can then appear as a variety of micro-nutrient deficiencies, or as macro-nutrient deficiencies. It can also come and go, being an issue one week, and confusing a grower into adding different nutrient ratios when all they needed to do is calibrate their meter.
Here's the pH spotting damage picture from the thread I included in the link.
View attachment 1323416
I don't know how anyone could claim this leaf is black and curling up. Perhaps you should actually read, actually educate yourself, rather than looking at picture books and trying to infer the information. I mean really, of all the things you said, this has to be the stupidest of them all. The plant is very clearly not turning black or curling up
Want some tables to look at? You clearly don't have any for yourself. The first one is pH and the second one is a nutrient toxicity table.
If you can take a few moments out of your busy day you'd see that having a pH beneath 6.5 will lock out Magnesium and Calcium. A pH over 6.5 can lock out Iron and Manganese. Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium have a larger window regarding pH but that doesn't mean you can deviate 1/2 a point of pH without any effect.
Establishing the pH at the value right at 6.5 keeps all elements available for uptake. I'm not making this up. Look it up for yourself before claiming to know something that very simply isn't true. I'm sorry you got so upset about my pointing out your bad advice but you're the one who felt the need to act like a know-it-all when you very clearly don't.
Good luck with your South Florida December Outdoor grow... You're going to need it. I mean, 1,200 posts in a matter of 1 month... I don't know how you find time to take a shit, much less grow a plant or have a job. Maybe you should stop posting and start reading.