Papasmurf99
Well-Known Member
I'm gunna go smoke some dank and go to sleep, tomorrow's a new day, got big plans to spend some time in my grow room tomorrow getting ready to expand yewwwww!
and yours was so short as wellLOL you quoted my post, but you obviously didn't read it.
. I had mad beef with him ages ago and fucked him at every turn.to the point where all he could say is I'm a racist homophobe. I pretty much made the assumption he and big lue were the same person and that he is actually a white guy pretending to be black and gay so he could use it as a shield for every argument.i asked him to take a photo of his skin with my name and date written on it but he bailed and went quiet for aawhile .then everyone realised he is full of shit.fuck yeah ill jump the uncle fuck train. remember that dude from the outdoor section years ago
So shit I guess I’m getting the other call fluids thenyou need to test at both 7 and 4 for it to be considered accurate. it might be accurate at 7 but read 4 when ph is actually 3etc
OK let's deconstruct this. Right you put 'true stories' in scare quotes, OK I get it we all get it, then you write 'Pinocchio as if the scare quotes were too subtle. Why not just say 'you are lying'. Why not just be straight play a straight bat.The funny part is you're playing with yourself haha
Got any more "true stories" for us Pinocchio ?
That's a very curious thing to say, what makes you think I didn't answer your post. Please explain.LOL you quoted my post, but you obviously didn't read it.
There will be a slope from 4 to 7, If 4 and 7 are both spot on you can be pretty confident that 6 is going to be right.So shit I guess I’m getting the other call fluids then
pretty much. its an exponential. its why more accurate meters need 3 point calibration or better. more points on the gradient to more precisely calculate the slope change. stupid funny how calculus worksThere will be a slope from 4 to 7, If 4 and 7 are both spot on you can be pretty confident that 6 is going to be right.
except plenty have already done those same test you did and came to the conclusion that the quality is sporadic at best. while majority of reviews on a quality units like bluelabs speak to years of continued use and plenty of after sale support from the manufacturer. many will repair out of warranty units for a small fee if you email them.There will be a slope from 4 to 7, If 4 and 7 are both spot on you can be pretty confident that 6 is going to be right.
I'd rather be posting useful stuff than just carrying on flaming, which is what my post is about the $7 meter, I have done the tests and anyone of the dozens of lurkers or people who read that post can be confident that that $7 meter is just a good as spending 50 bucks. I've done the tests for other people's benefit. That's the sort of posts I'd rather be making.
Someone says, 'it must be crap because it's cheap' well that's certainly what I thought but I took a chance and was surprised and now other people don't have to waste money. Because hydro shops prey on us dope heads they treat us like mugs who are so anal about our plants we'll swallow all their marketing bullshit.
Like the hippie house hydro shop that sells my viparspectra par 700 for $600, when I can get it from the manufacture with free delivery for $380 (ended up paying 320)
The easiest way is to get a cheap meter, it already comes with the calibration powders. Calibrate it then get the indicator drops and when you get the pH right with the calibrated cheap meter, which incidentally is the same price as buying buffer solution, no sorry the pH buffer solution was 12 bucks. So once you calibrate and check the 7 dollar meter with the supplied powder using distilled water. You then get your water to the right pH then you use the drops and see the colour, once you've done that you're golden you can use the drops for ever, you never need to calibrate and it's will always be as accurate as you'll ever need for hydro.So shit I guess I’m getting the other call fluids then
When I go out bushwalking from Kanangra Walls to Katoomba, a 4 day journey through the Wild Dog ranges, I take a gps, I also take a compass and map because my map is not going to fail me. Similarly once my meter is calibrated long enough so that I can then use that to calibrate the colour on the drops, I know the drops are a reliable back up.except plenty have already done those same test you did and came to the conclusion that the quality is sporadic at best. while majority of reviews on a quality units like bluelabs speak to years of continued use and plenty of after sale support from the manufacturer. many will repair out of warranty units for a small fee if you email them.
Yeah I get that, but as I said, I wouldn't care if my meter broke now because now I know what colour I'm looking for with the drops, and frankly I prefer that. I'll keep using the meter till it stops working. So far, it's brilliant. I'm just saying what I discovered. And it's not an opinion, really when this cheap meter read the 4 correctly after being calibrated to the 7 I would not have believed it if I did not see it for myself. If I could post a video here I would.when i was using ebay metres though i found one for about $30 with replaceable probes. some probes lasted a week others a month. last one had 3 months before i stopped using it.
while i understand what your saying most people also can read the colour chart supplied with the drops (piss yellow for 6 ph for most brands). the beauty of reaction tests is theyre a set chemical reaction and shouldnt need meter to know what ph your getting from it. most labs require electronic units to be double checked with litmus strips to verify. we as growers use a universal indicator (actually a mix of a few indicators) so we can tell the difference between 5.5 and 6 but not 5.9 and 6.1. if you wanted you could order a few specific indicators like Bromocresol purple and get your ph accurate to the decimal point without ever touching a meter.When I go out bushwalking from Kanangra Walls to Katoomba, a 4 day journey through the Wild Dog ranges, I take a gps, I also take a compass and map because my map is not going to fail me. Similarly once my meter is calibrated long enough so that I can then use that to calibrate the colour on the drops, I know the drops are a reliable back up.
I'm not doing lab work, the drops are perfectly fine for our use, we really don't need two decimal places precision. These are just my thoughts and I supply some reasoning with it. Some people will shoot me down for this but I'm really speaking not to experienced people I'm talking to the newbies who I know feel really nervous, who think if their pH is out a bit everyone will die.
But I always try to give clear reasoning how I come to my conclusions. Maybe I'm wrong in something I've said. I'm quite happy to be shown I'm wrong if I'm wrong. But there has to be some reasoning.
I’ll stick with my current ph meter n get some four done n dusted and it’s a lot less of a fuckaroundThe easiest way is to get a cheap meter, it already comes with the calibration powders. Calibrate it then get the indicator drops and when you get the pH right with the calibrated cheap meter, which incidentally is the same price as buying buffer solution, no sorry the pH buffer solution was 12 bucks. So once you calibrate and check the 7 dollar meter with the supplied powder using distilled water. You then get your water to the right pH then you use the drops and see the colour, once you've done that you're golden you can use the drops for ever, you never need to calibrate and it's will always be as accurate as you'll ever need for hydro.
I advised someone recently who asked me what viparspectra they should get, to get the PAR700 but then they didn't listen to the advice they asked for and bought the vipar 900V, which is shit. They bought it because it was 50 bucks cheaper but it was 900W instead of 700W so that must be good right. Er not the 900 which has more diodes and cost more to run and has a shitty exhaust design actually puts out quite a bit less light than the cooler running cheaper more versatile PAR700. Go figger.
if ur saying something like what u are saying it sounds like what you’re saying is a opinion how is it not unless there was like idk what word here mmmmm like prof for lack of a better wordYeah I get that, but as I said, I wouldn't care if my meter broke now because now I know what colour I'm looking for with the drops, and frankly I prefer that. I'll keep using the meter till it stops working. So far, it's brilliant. I'm just saying what I discovered. And it's not an opinion, really when this cheap meter read the 4 correctly after being calibrated to the 7 I would not have believed it if I did not see it for myself. If I could post a video here I would.
You're calibrating with filtered water so you're whole spiel about the accuracy of your toy meter is based of incorrect calibration.Yeah I get that, but as I said, I wouldn't care if my meter broke now because now I know what colour I'm looking for with the drops, and frankly I prefer that. I'll keep using the meter till it stops working. So far, it's brilliant. I'm just saying what I discovered. And it's not an opinion, really when this cheap meter read the 4 correctly after being calibrated to the 7 I would not have believed it if I did not see it for myself. If I could post a video here I would.
Why have a conversation with a guy that doesn't know the difference between distilled water and filtered water ?except plenty have already done those same test you did and came to the conclusion that the quality is sporadic at best. while majority of reviews on a quality units like bluelabs speak to years of continued use and plenty of after sale support from the manufacturer. many will repair out of warranty units for a small fee if you email them.