Its been very eye opening playing with those numbers.
If I use the 3.2 gallons they claim for ‘acceptance’ on this new tank, that works out to about .92 usable gallons or 3.48 liters. I had assumed that increasing the over all pressure in the system to say 95 – 135 for cut on/off pressures would increase the usable volume of the tank, but its actually the reverse. Going up to 95-135 lowers the usable from .92 gallons to .9. Lowering it to 75-115, raises the usable volume to .99 gallons. Increasing the spread does increase usable volume. Not huge differences at my scales, but still interesting.
There are two other things that I find really interesting as well.
First, you made this comment some time back. I forget where I copied it from though or how long ago it was, but Im curious to know if this still applies.
“In an ideal system, you would set the misting duration based on flowrate and chamber volume. For early growth, the misting duration would provide 0.02ml -0.04ml per gallon of chamber volume. For later growth, 0.06ml per gallon.
The interval between mistings is adjusted to provide the target daily throughput, which will be somewhat dependant on environment variables (light,heat etc). As an example, a 26 gallon chamber with one 1gph nozzle would need a 0.5- 1 second misting duration in early growth and upto 1.5 seconds for later growth. The interval between mistings for early growth would be 35-70 seconds (dependant on the misting duration setting) with a target daily throughput of 1.3 litres. For later growth, the interval would be around 50 seconds with a target daily throughput of 2.65L. The name of the game is to inject mist little and often to maintain an optimal aeroponic environment.”
If I adjust the flow numbers you have recommended to fit my root chamber – 45 gallons - I would be using roughly 2.25 liters/ .59 gallons per day in early growth, and 4.58 liters / 1.2 gallons per day in later growth.
If that all still applies, and we use the .92 gallon number for usable volume, my pump should only cycle once every 36 hours or so early on, increasing up to once every 18 hours or so later in the grow.
Of course, I still dont know if I can fill the chamber and keep the flow rates that low until I do some testing.
Are those flow rates still good targets to shoot for?
The second thing really boggles my mind. When I first read that post above, I was like “Huh. That seems like pretty low flow rates.” and then I went on my way without really grasping the implications.
But, now that I think on it some more, those are amazingly low flow rates! At least when I compare them to my last hydro grow. During the later stages of flower, my three plants were drinking an average of 1 gallon of nutes/day/plant for a total of three gallons a day. Some small part of that was surely due to evaporation, etc, but the bulk was sucked up through the roots.
With your flow numbers, the usage will be a little more than 1/3 of that number – BUT - it makes no difference how many plants I have in the chamber! On top of that, it seems to me that the majority of the mist is going to be lost on the sides and bottom of the chamber, or at least a large %. That means aero is somewhere beyond 3 times as efficient as traditional hydro – possibly a lot more than that - depending on how much mist gets stuck on the walls/ceiling/floor of the chamber, and how many plants are sharing the chamber.
But wait, there's more! You also said somewhere that EC levels in aero should be 1/2 to 1/4 of normal levels, so that makes it even more dramatic.
Im having trouble accepting that, but it sure looks like a worthy goal to shoot for, and is something that would (hopefully) justify the extra trouble and expense of growing this way.
Consider me boggled!