That is the route I'm taking. I resisted for so long because of familiarity/ cost of system, size, production, and sheer enjoyment of watching plants jump out their ass as well as refusing to admit defeat.I have no clue wtf this issue is, or what the answer might be.
That said let me offer some advice that will allow you to quickly and simply grow some buds: Use soil my friend the god of hydro clearly hates you!
If I try " chasing" a running ph level with PH up or down, I get a white cloud in my DWC. I can add up or down every few hours and it's like it drops right out of the DWC (see attached photo of bottom of waterfarm bucket) Up or down depends upon the type of media.
Thanks for the input. I just ran a test bucket for the heck of it with no ph up or down. Tap water only with chlorine / chloramite remover.Okay, this may be a bit late.. but the white cloud is precipitation. At that point, the solution is basically unstable and you have to start over with a fresh tank.
So why are you getting the precipitation? The precipitant is likely calcium phosphate. The reason you get it when you add pH down is because you're adding phosphoric acid to a solution that's very high in calcium. You either need to reduce the calcium, use nitric acid instead of phosphoric acid, or reduce the amount of phosphate you're feeding.
The only nitric acid based pH down I know of is Technaflora, or you could buy 30% nitric acid online (handle with care). Calcium nitrate is highly soluble, and thus will not be a precipitant from excess nitrates.
just throwing this out there, i have had real bad issue with slime and ph/ppm swings. i have no light leaks, but warm res temps between 70-73. i used 10ml/4gl of h202 daily for 7 days. killed slime. started using flying skulls Z7 water conditioner at 1/2ml per gl. and also using UC roots by current culture. no more slime, no more ph swings, no more ppm swings, really happy plants.
Do you happen to have a picture of what that looks like. I'm having trouble understanding how the plant maintains its stability.Go without a media so you can rule it out. Simple is best and I only use netpot and collars, no media from clone to harvest. I am on a 10 day vacation now and have 350gal of RES's I don't worry about.
its the plants system responded to your initially ph.. dwc/rdwc ph over 5.8 rots especially organics. qed 5.3-5.8tops!I've experienced a long term problem .
What do you do step by step to make your nute mix? What order is everything added?
Oh crap, you know what. I think I ended up doing the exact same thing to myself this last res change. Was from using ph Down and Up. The ph up seems to be some freaking impossibly hard to break carbonate buffer (like maybe 5 ml of down, followed by maybe 20ml of up since then). I do also have a strong precipitate that seems to come and go depending on how fast/much im adjusting.So why are you getting the precipitation? The precipitant is likely calcium phosphate. The reason you get it when you add pH down is because you're adding phosphoric acid to a solution that's very high in calcium. You either need to reduce the calcium, use nitric acid instead of phosphoric acid, or reduce the amount of phosphate you're feeding.
Oh crap, you know what. I think I ended up doing the exact same thing to myself this last res change. Was from using ph Down and Up. The ph up seems to be some freaking impossibly hard to break carbonate buffer (like maybe 5 ml of down, followed by maybe 20ml of up since then). I do also have a strong precipitate that seems to come and go depending on how fast/much im adjusting.
Needlessly to say, I have to change the rez soon (this rez change was a big fail). The plants are pretty pissed, foliar feeding right now.
im guessing the ph up (gh ph up) was potassium carbonate. Good info on avoid phosphates- im assuming that was one of those weird salt solubility rules i forgot. i dont think ive ever had anything ever go right when i used the ph up- probably best just to avoid it in the future- if the ph drops that low, ill just change the rez. ive never had a mix start anywhere near 'low'.Is the pH up you're using potassium carbonate or calcium carbonate? Even potassium hydroxide, which is ideal for hydro, might cause precipitants if calcium and phosphate levels are excessively high just from raising the pH. The best way to prevent precipitants is to avoid excessively high phosphate levels.
or dilute the solutions he's adding. if he's dumping straight nutes/ph up or down into his res that already has chemicals in it, precipitation will absolutely occur.Okay, this may be a bit late.. but the white cloud is precipitation. At that point, the solution is basically unstable and you have to start over with a fresh tank.
So why are you getting the precipitation? The precipitant is likely calcium phosphate. The reason you get it when you add pH down is because you're adding phosphoric acid to a solution that's very high in calcium. You either need to reduce the calcium, use nitric acid instead of phosphoric acid, or reduce the amount of phosphate you're feeding.
The only nitric acid based pH down I know of is Technaflora, or you could buy 30% nitric acid online (handle with care). Calcium nitrate is highly soluble, and thus will not be a precipitant from excess nitrates.