Hello Y'all, I'm hoping to get some advice regarding environmental control from some of you deep thinkers )
I'm close to a decent enough solution, but need some creative solutions and some devil's advocates to think of extremes in each space since the only way I see to manage such a small flower and veg space without filling the flower space with a bunch of redundant equipment) is to share air thus having a hybrid room (sealed with some venting).
Room diagram attached.
Available space: 10x10, will likely go with a tent due to budget/time/wife/budget (unless I could just use wood with no insulation)
Space Allocation: 4x4 flower, the rest of the 10x10 for veg/propagation/equipment (yes, this is opposite to most, but I focus more on veg and clones). This means I'll have a 4x4 flower tent inside the 10x10 veg tent/room.
Lights: a 1,000 watt HPS, a 1,000 watt MH, a 630 watt CMH, and a rack with LED and t5. The MH is usually only set to 400/600 depending on how much growth I need.
I'm using vapor pressure deficit figures as a guide rather than generic temp or humidity ranges...maybe that's wrong, but looking at VPD charts, I'm thinking 80-85 degrees and 60% humidity for flower, (reducing temp & humidity over last 2-3 weeks of flower) @ 1500 PPM CO2 and for the veg room, I'm not that worried about CO2 so thinking more like 70-75 degrees and 70% humidity keeping CO2 around normal levels.
Main Problem: Budget and space. Not wanting 2 different CO2 setups, 2 different humidifiers/Air Conditioning units, heaters, etc...plus not having space if I did. Also, I can't exhaust air into the basement space as smell would be an issue so any exhaust is out a window only.
Basement Temps/Humidity:
Summer average: Temp 60-70 degrees, 50-60% humidity
Winter average: Temp 60-70 degrees, 35-45% humidity
What I've Come Up With
1. The flower space:
HUMIDITY
To Dehumidify, pre-filter with intake fan, hooked up to humidity controller (dehumidify). This would pull in less humid air from the basement area and pump it into the tent. This would passively push the humid (and CO2 rich air) into the Veg space (but...being a "sealed room" I would also need the exhaust of the Veg room to exit the window, otherwise the air (smell) will push itself out somewhere).
To humidify, the controller can be hooked up to either:
a) a small humidifier in flower tent (likely best option)
b) an intake fan pulling more humid (but cooler) air from the veg space (passively pushing more arid air into the veg space in a loop) or
c) carbon filter and exhaust fan to the outside (this would still passively pull air from the veg space, but the arid air (along with any CO2) would be exhausted, rather than put into the veg room
TEMPERATURE
Variable speed temperature controller hooked up to HPS/MH hood fan. If temps too low, fan would slow, if too hot, fan would speed up. This would need to be backed up with another temperature control as the cooled hood itself is likely unable to keep temps down during Summer and will also effect temperature in the Veg Space since the MH light runs on the same exhaust.
Only other options besides buying the world's smallest A/C unit are:
a) hot air exhausted through carbon filter and out of house (which means humidify option "C" above couldn't be chosen since no controller I've seen allows the same device to be activated for both heat AND/OR low humidity--although there are numerous ones that would allow for Hot Temp AND/OR High Humidity)--and CO2 will be lost, or
b) hot air is exhausted into veg room (this would also either passively pull in air from the veg room creating a loop or I'd have to actively pump in air from the basement space which means the intake fan listed in the "dehumidify" setting above would activate to both dehumidify or cool down the room (which there are controllers for). This would mean that every time temperature was brought down, so would the humidity. If temps were very hot, humidity would plummet.
2. The veg space:
HUMIDITY
Humidity controller, dehumidifier and humidifier
TEMPERATURE
A/C and heater
Other Considerations:
Smell and Cycling Air: Yes, a carbon scrubber in the room will be there, but it would be nice to cycle air (maybe on a timer) out of the house, pulling in air from the basement every once in a while. In the example above, as the flower room pulls in basement air to dehumidify, there must be air that leaves the system somehow (air in = air out). This also needs to be hooked up to a carbon filter so again, I would need a controller that would activate on a timer AND when humidity is low in the flower room...which I don't think exists. If such a controller did exist, I'd still prefer it to exchange air directly with the basement air rather than via the flower room.
CO2: Veg space CO2. If I can cycle air in and out of the veg room, there should be enough CO2. Also, if I dehumidify and cool the flower room by exchanging air with the veg room then some CO2 will be supplemented into the Veg space but will this be enough given the temp / humidity targets and accounting for the fact that the CO2 will shut off for 6 hours of the veg cycle while lights are off in the flower room.
WOW....That's all I can think of for now. Insight very, very much appreciated. It's a lot to read.
Happy Growing!
I'm close to a decent enough solution, but need some creative solutions and some devil's advocates to think of extremes in each space since the only way I see to manage such a small flower and veg space without filling the flower space with a bunch of redundant equipment) is to share air thus having a hybrid room (sealed with some venting).
Room diagram attached.
Available space: 10x10, will likely go with a tent due to budget/time/wife/budget (unless I could just use wood with no insulation)
Space Allocation: 4x4 flower, the rest of the 10x10 for veg/propagation/equipment (yes, this is opposite to most, but I focus more on veg and clones). This means I'll have a 4x4 flower tent inside the 10x10 veg tent/room.
Lights: a 1,000 watt HPS, a 1,000 watt MH, a 630 watt CMH, and a rack with LED and t5. The MH is usually only set to 400/600 depending on how much growth I need.
I'm using vapor pressure deficit figures as a guide rather than generic temp or humidity ranges...maybe that's wrong, but looking at VPD charts, I'm thinking 80-85 degrees and 60% humidity for flower, (reducing temp & humidity over last 2-3 weeks of flower) @ 1500 PPM CO2 and for the veg room, I'm not that worried about CO2 so thinking more like 70-75 degrees and 70% humidity keeping CO2 around normal levels.
Main Problem: Budget and space. Not wanting 2 different CO2 setups, 2 different humidifiers/Air Conditioning units, heaters, etc...plus not having space if I did. Also, I can't exhaust air into the basement space as smell would be an issue so any exhaust is out a window only.
Basement Temps/Humidity:
Summer average: Temp 60-70 degrees, 50-60% humidity
Winter average: Temp 60-70 degrees, 35-45% humidity
What I've Come Up With
1. The flower space:
HUMIDITY
To Dehumidify, pre-filter with intake fan, hooked up to humidity controller (dehumidify). This would pull in less humid air from the basement area and pump it into the tent. This would passively push the humid (and CO2 rich air) into the Veg space (but...being a "sealed room" I would also need the exhaust of the Veg room to exit the window, otherwise the air (smell) will push itself out somewhere).
To humidify, the controller can be hooked up to either:
a) a small humidifier in flower tent (likely best option)
b) an intake fan pulling more humid (but cooler) air from the veg space (passively pushing more arid air into the veg space in a loop) or
c) carbon filter and exhaust fan to the outside (this would still passively pull air from the veg space, but the arid air (along with any CO2) would be exhausted, rather than put into the veg room
TEMPERATURE
Variable speed temperature controller hooked up to HPS/MH hood fan. If temps too low, fan would slow, if too hot, fan would speed up. This would need to be backed up with another temperature control as the cooled hood itself is likely unable to keep temps down during Summer and will also effect temperature in the Veg Space since the MH light runs on the same exhaust.
Only other options besides buying the world's smallest A/C unit are:
a) hot air exhausted through carbon filter and out of house (which means humidify option "C" above couldn't be chosen since no controller I've seen allows the same device to be activated for both heat AND/OR low humidity--although there are numerous ones that would allow for Hot Temp AND/OR High Humidity)--and CO2 will be lost, or
b) hot air is exhausted into veg room (this would also either passively pull in air from the veg room creating a loop or I'd have to actively pump in air from the basement space which means the intake fan listed in the "dehumidify" setting above would activate to both dehumidify or cool down the room (which there are controllers for). This would mean that every time temperature was brought down, so would the humidity. If temps were very hot, humidity would plummet.
2. The veg space:
HUMIDITY
Humidity controller, dehumidifier and humidifier
TEMPERATURE
A/C and heater
Other Considerations:
Smell and Cycling Air: Yes, a carbon scrubber in the room will be there, but it would be nice to cycle air (maybe on a timer) out of the house, pulling in air from the basement every once in a while. In the example above, as the flower room pulls in basement air to dehumidify, there must be air that leaves the system somehow (air in = air out). This also needs to be hooked up to a carbon filter so again, I would need a controller that would activate on a timer AND when humidity is low in the flower room...which I don't think exists. If such a controller did exist, I'd still prefer it to exchange air directly with the basement air rather than via the flower room.
CO2: Veg space CO2. If I can cycle air in and out of the veg room, there should be enough CO2. Also, if I dehumidify and cool the flower room by exchanging air with the veg room then some CO2 will be supplemented into the Veg space but will this be enough given the temp / humidity targets and accounting for the fact that the CO2 will shut off for 6 hours of the veg cycle while lights are off in the flower room.
WOW....That's all I can think of for now. Insight very, very much appreciated. It's a lot to read.
Happy Growing!