Total.Hydroponic.Control
Active Member
Apologies for the screen distortion, this is a simulation of the actual screen, when it was converted to JPeg it caused some distortion.
You can get peristaltic pumps that put out at minimum 0.1mL/sec (+- 0.05mL) and 1mL/sec maximum, that should be more than enough control to dose a reservoir over 1L. At 10L that will give you 10ppm resolution.Hey man, nice bunch of expensive looking toys you got there I'm all about automation, i always say i would rather man the machine then be it.
I'm most interested in the peristaltic pumps to dose nutrients into the reservoir, or more so how you intend to rig that up? I recently started a DIY to gravity dose my res, went with a liquid level controller and some solenoids only, whole thing cost me around $130 and i'm about done with it, here. How do you plan to have adjustability in the amount you dose? I couldn't figure out a convenient way with pumps, so i went with syringes in my build.
subbed.
I'm most comfortable programming ladder logic with Allen Bradley hardware. Unfortunately Allen Bradley is quite expensive. That is why I chose to build the entire system off of Automation Direct hardware. It is much more reasonable.I wish I had the money to purchase a standalone HMI and all the transmitters. I have a SLC504 (16ID, 16IA, 16OD, 16OA) setup sitting boxed up in a closet somewhere from when I was in college, I intend to use it for something someday, lol.
That said, I am doing something similar, but I am having to build everything myself to cut costs and will be using a microcontroller (AVR or PIC, haven't decided) or maybe something like the Raspberry Pi running linux, or both!
The way I have designed my setup is similar to yours, except my grow is a perpetual soil-less SoG, clone to flower. So I will have 6 separate containers (5 for flower, 1 for mother) that need to be independently monitored for pH, EC/TDS, and temperature, as well as 4 peristaltic pumps (pH up, pH down, Nutes, fresh water) per container. Then all the atmospheric monitoring and control, oi vey!
That said, you can get the peristaltic pumps off of eBay dirt cheap, that is including the head pump, a dc motor, and a mounting bracket. The ones I'm getting pH and nutes will be $20 each and have a dosing rate between 0.1mL/sec and 1mL/sec (+- 0.05mL), and since I will only be using 1 bottle of nutes, simply measuring EC/TDS will be enough for determining ppm.
I'm not a big fan of 0-5V signals for an environment where you could be battling electrical noise from digital ballasts. If this manufacturer could provide a 4-20mA option I would be much more interested. 0-5v can be stable, and the 0-10v range is a widely utilized industrial standard due to the ease of measurement (you can check the signal without breaking the circuit), but this project is centered around noise control, and 0-5v can't carry a signal with the same range, and noise immunity that 4-20mA can.Anyone used these transmitters?
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You may find them here
http://webpages.charter.net/tdsmeter/products.html
Cheaper? Not likely. It isn't overly complicated to do all that. I could probably build it myself for less than $100. Probes not included.Hey guys. You should check out this product: www.robomatic.com . They are a new company that launched at the San Francisco 2012 Indoor Gardening expo. they have a networked capable EC/PH/TDS sensor. Two of them.. With microSD card logging and webserver. Basicly what you are trying to do.. They are a lot cheaper than building your own. Especially time invested at under $1000 for a three peristaltic pump system.
check it out
www.robomatic.com