nutrients won't fog, waste of time for pot, decent for other applications.Been looking at a 300psi aeromist pump. I plan to run the .008 nozzles. Anyone have any experience with these pumps in particular?
0.008" (0.2mm) nozzles would soon clog up running nutes.
You can go for it if you like, but dont say i didnt warn ya that those 10/24 threaded patio misting nozzles will be a nightmare
@cat I can turn neat neem oil into fog with 40psi of compressed air
Sorry just seeing this. Im not fixated on the pressure. We just had good luck with the higher PSI systems in the past so it's what I know. The new system is a new design. I'm going to run horizontal tubes insieated of vertical so I'm nervous that I won't get adequate coverage of the fog with the lower pressure systems.why do you want to run so much pressure? The costs will go thru the roof on tubing and fittings. From a control point of view you`ll be limited to how fast the pump can respond rather than how long you want the misting pulse to be.
i have heard in the world of hydro have not seen for myself but guys a running these in 50 ltr tubs like a dwc feeding rootsBeen looking at a 300psi aeromist pump. I plan to run the .008 nozzles. Anyone have any experience with these pumps in particular?
base nutes will but running like rhizo humic and fulvic acids and kelps clogs will be a nightmare unless u had a filter chamber be4 reaching the mistersnutrients won't fog, waste of time for pot, decent for other applications.
don't waste time on nebulizers/foggers.
All nozzles, hydraulics and AA`s put out a range of droplet sizes. if the nozzle is decent quality you should be able to get a spec sheet showing the SMD,VMD values and droplet size distribution as a percentage of the whole at different pressures. A 0.2mm Amfog is a pretty standard brass/stainless hp patio misting nozzle. At 1000psi the VMD is 5 microns but the droplet size range covers 2-30 microns. At 250psi, the droplet size range shifts upwards to include larger droplets, the distribution of large and small droplets also changes. If the pressure isnt constant, the droplet size range wont be constant either, thats where solenoids have the edge over pumps, instant on.off versus a pressure rise/fall as the pump turns on and off.
Yeah I have no doubt they can preform well given a space with decent volume. It's these damn 4" tubes that have me worried. I really don't want to run a Recirculating system..i have heard in the world of hydro have not seen for myself but guys a running these in 50 ltr tubs like a dwc feeding roots
1000psi solenoids would be expensive and not much use without some timing wizardry to sync the pump and solenoids to maintain pressure. I had to come up with something similar to control the rotary AA nozzle setup. You`ll find most salesmen arent too clued up on what they are selling, the figure he gave you will be the SMD (Sauter Mean Diameter) which is not related to the nozzles realworld droplet diameter The SMD value is the diameter of a ficticious droplet having the same volume to surface area ratio as the total volume of all the droplets to the total surface area of all the droplets. In a nutshell it tells you nothing useful about the actual droplet range delivered by the nozzle
The VMD ( Volume Median Diameter or Dv0.5 ) is much more useful. thats the value where 50% of the total droplets in the nozzle spray volume are larger and 50% are smaller, so if the VMD value is 30 microns at 1000psi, you`ll know that 50% of the droplets from the nozzle will be larger than 30um and the other 50% will be smaller than 30um.
Its upto you what kind of setup you want but imho using 300psi in 4" tubes will provide no benefit over low pressure sprinklers mounted at the top....unless you run them drain to waste
Here`s one of my AA nozzle datasheets
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