Cool. You doing any monthly flushes or anything?I run about 1.2 ec or 600 ppm's in veg and around 1.5 ec or 750 ppm's in flower. That's using a Hanna meter.
Not a great deal on .ca, $105 for a 6 packPicked up a set off of Amazon today.
104 for a 12 pack. That’s why I pulled the trigger, price was right.Not a great deal on .ca, $105 for a 6 pack
No runoff unless they're improperly tuned. With these you generally end up using less water and less ferts because they're super efficient and there's no runoff. That's why it's important to not be like me and over feed lol. Start at about 5-600ppm and go from there. If you wanna mix in the clay balls I would just keep them away from the sensor because you want nice even contact with the media and the ceramic cone. My stuff is 70/30 Coco perliteHow much if any runoff will there be? I'm actually looking at the 5 carrot setup to test in square pails. I'm not looking forward to drilling them out for drainage as I originally got 12 to use in a recirc setup but thinking way more complicated lol. Also I have a huge bag of clay balls (20lbs) and would like to incorporate them somehow, perhaps a vereculite/perlite mix, any thoughts? I'm running a flood and drain kind of thing now.
So clay balls are probably not the best then. Coco has always scared me away due to quality and cost, its pretty expensive around here I think from initial inquiries, maybe I should rethink that lol. Perilite I have, again a huge bag, I use it in my outdoor soil.No runoff unless they're improperly tuned. With these you generally end up using less water and less ferts because they're super efficient and there's no runoff. That's why it's important to not be like me and over feed lol. Start at about 5-600ppm and go from there. If you wanna mix in the clay balls I would just keep them away from the sensor because you want nice even contact with the media and the ceramic cone. My stuff is 70/30 Coco perlite
ideally you'd want pure coco or coco/perlite in about the 70/30 range seems to work well.So clay balls are probably not the best then. Coco has always scared me away due to quality and cost, its pretty expensive around here I think from initial inquiries, maybe I should rethink that lol. Perilite I have, again a huge bag, I use it in my outdoor soil.
Pure coco is the best.ideally you'd want pure coco or coco/perlite in about the 70/30 range seems to work well.
It's 8mm line. The lines coming off that to the blumats are 3mm.Pretty sure that’s a 1/4 inch line.
You said that you put together that 18 gallon resovoir, did the kit come with the necessary grommet to use for the resovoir?Pure coco is the best.
I use botanicaire coco grow coco that comes in 5 kilogram bricks. It's what they sell down the street and it's double washed. I re-hydrate it with half strength nutes unless I'm planting seedlings or clones when I use 1/4 strength.
It's 8mm line. The lines coming off that to the blumats are 3mm.
Im sure the heavy duty totes with the yellow/red lids will work and your right about the bottom drain, you probably won't find one. If you buy a rain barrel drain they have a valve that fits right on it. Also from what I can see, it should have come with a thru hull fitting that you use for the res.Anyone have any ideas on other terms to find a 15-20 gallon gravity drain tank? Not easy to find a bottom draining resovoir.
And u reuse the coco? Seems like it would be a pain to do that . And have you had any clog up and quit? I'm just trying to weigh these as opposed to drain to waste with timed watering.Pure coco is the best.
I use botanicaire coco grow coco that comes in 5 kilogram bricks. It's what they sell down the street and it's double washed. I re-hydrate it with half strength nutes unless I'm planting seedlings or clones when I use 1/4 strength.
It's 8mm line. The lines coming off that to the blumats are 3mm.
They sell coco bricks that have been dehydrated, that you have to rehydrate to use.And u reuse the coco? Seems like it would be a pain to do that . And have you had any clog up and quit? I'm just trying to weigh these as opposed to drain to waste with timed watering.