I hear what you’re saying I think. Basically you are wondering if new compounds can form. I imagine that yes, over time the mixture of various compounds that are in the reservoir will breakdown to some extent and may even form new/other compounds eventually. For example, I imagine that the carbonate system comes into play where pH could change over time as carbonate, bicarbonate, free hydrogen and hydroxide ions all interact and change relative to one another. This is common in wastewater treatment and hydrogeologicalMy English sucks, so does my Chemistry
I meant more something that you can compare CO to CO2. The first one is very poisonous.
I thought perhaps something could also happen to an element in the nutes.
But again: I have no clue at all.
This is what Dr. Daniel Fernandez said about the subject:I hear what you’re saying I think. Basically you are wondering if new compounds can form. I imagine that yes, over time the mixture of various compounds that are in the reservoir will breakdown to some extent and may even form new/other compounds eventually. For example, I imagine that the carbonate system comes into play where pH could change over time as carbonate, bicarbonate, free hydrogen and hydroxide ions all interact and change relative to one another. This is common in wastewater treatment and hydrogeological
Essentially, our reservoirs act like little organic chemistry experiments which will affect pH, and potentially nutrient availability.
I’m hardly an expert on this and haven’t looked at this kind of stuff in years. I’m ten years outta college but did organic chemistry and engineering - I imagine that all sorts of things take place in a reservoir over time.
Good luck!
The following excerpt is from Maximum Yield so not always the best source but this info seems to have some traction:This is what Dr. Daniel Fernandez said about the subject:
Add in-line UV filters and carbon filters. It is fundamental to ensure no microorganisms contaminate your nutrient solution. For this reason, online UV-filters are necessary to keep the nutrient solution as sterile as possible. Carbon filters are also very useful as they remove plant exudates that can contaminate the solution and cause problems within the crop itself. Many of these exudates are food for microorganisms, others are plant hormones that might cause unwanted responses in the plants. However both carbon filtration and UV filters can cause some issues – such as the destruction and adsorption of heavy metal chelates – so it is important to use chelates that are more resistant to UV and have less affinity for carbon filters to alleviate these problems.
In the early days of hydroponics there was concern that the organic matter, dead root cells and compounds released by roots would accumulate in the limited root zone and nutrient solution to the point where it promoted disease and retarded growth.
It was quickly proven that this isn’t the case, and we have come to understand in more detail how the dynamics of a restricted root zone works. Methods designed to disinfect and remove organic compounds or frequent nutrient solution changes were sometimes used to control the buildup of these exudates, but studies have shown this is not necessarily beneficial.
When microbial populations are permitted to develop in healthy hydroponic systems, they break down and metabolize carbon compounds in the root zone or nutrient solution, so this sort of buildup doesn’t occur when all is working well.
Perhaps you also have the answer to this then:I did flood and drain for a long time, in multiple houses at once, and had great results from running my reservoir for the whole flowering cycle without dumping. So IME it's ok so long as you have things dialed in and the plants are healthy.
Your plants are right lol. If they are healthy and happy I don't think it matters if the EC stays the same or drops a little.Who is right?
Dr. Daniel or the diagram?
Why is that?FWIW, In my flood and drain, the water drops and the EC remains pretty much the same but when I top off the water level the PPM needs a little boost.
Renfro will answer this better, but I believe the water level dropping with static EC just means the nutrient uptake is relatively low compared to the total volume of concentrated nutrient water.Why is that?
Because you want your EC to slowly increase during your bloom?
It tops off daily by float on a timer and I maintain PPM with add backs (usually bloom add backs).Why is that?
Because you want your EC to slowly increase during your bloom?
Ah, I think I misunderstood your earlier reply.It tops off daily by float on a timer and I maintain PPM with add backs (usually bloom add backs).
All good. I was a little confused lol.Ah, I think I misunderstood your earlier reply.
I sometimes miss things because English is not my first language.All good. I was a little confused lol.
I can totally understand that, my excuse is just being high lol.I sometimes miss things because English is not my first language.
I am running an ebb and flow 3 feed a day cycle. I simply keep a spare reservoir of nutrients premixed. I will top off the other reservoirs with it until it is empty. Then it is easy to remix another full concentration batch in the spare res. I continue to top up reservoirs until they are 20 days old, then I dump, clean, and start over. I use simple paper labels on the lids to note each reservoirs last fresh refill. I also keep my reservoirs spaced out one day from one another to avoid that very long day off redoing all reservoirs at once.Hi guys,
I run a flood and drain systems, with 100gal res's that I change every 2 weeks. Recently, in a veg tent, I have seen slow/miscolored growth towards the end of a 2 week cycle (with E.C and PH are fine). I feel like I need to drop the res change frequency to every 10 days and see if this phenonemon shows again, however, I don't want the extra work of more res changes.
How often do you guys change your nutrients? Should I investigate changing every 10 days, or even less?