Hydroguard vs Photosynthesis plus for Bacillus Amyloliquefaciens

fartoblue

Well-Known Member
Is my thinking correct? Hydroguard contains Bacillus Amyloliquefaciens @ 1.00 x 10 4cfu's ml. Photosynthesis plus contains Bacillus Amyloliquefaciens @ 1.00 x 10 7cfu's ml, does suggest PP contain just short of twice as much colony forming units (cfu's) of the bacterium.

Be great if someone could explain as I don't understand the colony forming unit/ml (cfu's/ml) calculation
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
@fartoblue

Explanation:

Equation reads as 1.00 x (10 to the 4th power) cfu's (per) ml

Same thing for the next value. 1.00 x (10 to the 7th power) cfu's (per) ml

So then, # 2 is far more then dbl the first.

Understand now?
 
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fartoblue

Well-Known Member
Many thanks for the reply Dr Who, I still don't understand. Could you break it down an tell me what each number is specific to.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
@fartoblue

Explanation:

Equation reads as 1.00 x (10 to the 4th power) cfu's (per) ml

Same thing for the next value. 1.00 x (10 to the 7th power) cfu's (per) ml

So then, # 2 is far more then dbl the first.

Understand now?
three orders of magnitude...sample one would contain 100,000 units.....
sample two would contain 100, 000,000 units in the same volume..
 
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fartoblue

Well-Known Member
Ahh thanks the penny has dropped.
So that makes Photosynthesis plus 10 times stronger than Hydroguard with Bacillus Amyloliquefacien, plus you get loads of other bacteria thrown in.
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
Ahh thanks the penny has dropped.
So that makes Photosynthesis plus 10 times stronger than Hydroguard with Bacillus Amyloliquefacien, plus you get loads of other bacteria thrown in.
The real kicker is that CFU's should be defined as "potential" colony forming units!


Not all of them will start forming a colony......Viability is a factor....

One maybe not as well sourced or the CFU's are of a lower viable %....

The answer is to try them and see what one work's best for you....
 

fartoblue

Well-Known Member
Thanks so much. As you can see mathematical calculations are not my strong point.

Makes Hydroguard look even more of a nonsense against Photosynthesis plus or some of the other similar products.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Thanks so much. As you can see mathematical calculations are not my strong point.

Makes Hydroguard look even more of a nonsense against Photosynthesis plus or some of the other similar products.
like Dr. Who said, you have to look at the whole picture, it says X amount of cfu..not X amount of guaranteed viable active cfu...
i'm not familiar with the photo product, hydroguard has a good reputation, but i've used it once, and wasn't impressed with it...i'd try the other product and if it works, screw hydroguard
 

fartoblue

Well-Known Member
Thanks Roger as mentioned Microbe life Photosynthesis plus is the only product I have ever used where I can honestly say I could see a difference for the better within a few days.
 

fartoblue

Well-Known Member
I'm in UK mate not available here.
see if you can find BASF Integral. or a dry version called Double Nickel (manufacturer unknown)

@fartoblue the double nickel was the dry version, finally remembered the name of it. not sure if it's in the UK
Thanks Rky
Double Nickel LC not available in Uk. I think Certis is the manufacturer.
 

fartoblue

Well-Known Member
I am now totally bamboozled now,what the heck is this calculation (1.3×1011cfu/kg) and how does it compare to Hydroguards 1.00 x 10 4cfu's m.

I presume a gram of water weight is around 1 ml so the 1.3×1011cfu/kg could read 1.3×1011cfu/1000ml
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
I've been using Great White in place of Hydroguard for a long time now...same bennies as hydroguard, plus myc's. Is there much of a difference between Great White and the Photosynthesis you mentioned above, Fartoblue?
 

Nabbers

Well-Known Member
I would assume that if it's measured in g or kg it would be a dry product. You would measure the dose with a scale rather than teaspoon or whatever you choose to use for liquids.
 
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