dragula420
Active Member
Looking for a good, trusted water pH meter to order off amazon or anywhere really. I bought one and it was broken out of the box, didnt read anything.
I used Bluelab pens years ago, they were great, and Bluelab has always had a great reputation. I was going to buy one until I read the recent reviews on Amazon, seems the quality has declined. That is why I bought the $39 pen, I can buy two for less than 1 Bluelab pen and the quality seems good enough to me for what we do.
It's probably more the carelessness of users. They blame the equipment instead of their negligence and blame the equipment. There seems to be an increased trend of this kind of behavior over the years, so I'd opt to blame the user not the manufacturer for lesser quality.I used Bluelab pens years ago, they were great, and Bluelab has always had a great reputation. I was going to buy one until I read the recent reviews on Amazon, seems the quality has declined. That is why I bought the $39 pen, I can buy two for less than 1 Bluelab pen and the quality seems good enough to me for what we do.
One thing I like about this $39 pen is they say I don't need storage solution. Time will tell. If this one dies, I'd be willing to try a Hanna brand pen, they seem to be pretty good in the same price range as Bluelab.It's probably more the carelessness of users. They blame the equipment instead of their negligence and blame the equipment. There seems to be an increased trend of this kind of behavior over the years, so I'd opt to blame the user not the manufacturer for lesser quality.
I'm just guessing. I have no idea of their previous quality but I'm very pleased with the current level of quality.
That one has "agile glass electrode" and "evtemal reference"...thats utter gibberish , as well as not needing a storage solution.One thing I like about this $39 pen is they say I don't need storage solution. Time will tell. If this one dies, I'd be willing to try a Hanna brand pen, they seem to be pretty good in the same price range as Bluelab.
No one reads this, they just bitch and throw them away.It's probably more the carelessness of users. They blame the equipment instead of their negligence and blame the equipment. There seems to be an increased trend of this kind of behavior over the years, so I'd opt to blame the user not the manufacturer for lesser quality.
39 dollar ph pen is junkOne thing I like about this $39 pen is they say I don't need storage solution. Time will tell. If this one dies, I'd be willing to try a Hanna brand pen, they seem to be pretty good in the same price range as Bluelab.
I'll pick up a bluelab here soon. I'd rather spend the money on a meter that I know is accurate and will last a while. I tried to go as cheap as I could on parts without sacrificing quality, I learned my lesson with cheap pH meters.39 dollar ph pen is junk
pls dont make decisions based on noob growers that put a review on amazon
Im going to do my research on brands and meters. I found a cheaper Apera that has replaceable electrode and some HM digitals. The bluelabs are a little more than I want to spend on a pH meter, right now anyways.ya im not pushing bluelab or anything. they are just ultra reliable and accurate. ask any experienced grower and most will say hanna or bluelab.
What if I'm not using soil?Your going to spend a lot of money on a decent ph meter. I've done a lot of research on accuracy, and the market is absolutely flooded with FAKE ph meters. They are literally fake and give you no accuracy. The ones that work are really expensive, and you have to maintain them to keep that accuracy. Even then, the way you measure with it can still make it inaccurate, because you are dealing with more variables than you think.
For just water, I would look into your areas water report, which is usually posted in a pdf online somewhere. It will tell you the last measured PH, and it is a good average. If you are using fertilizer solution, you can email the company and ask them what it is based on the PH of the water you are using. They will have a good idea of what it will be.
If you are still not sure, just make sure to include nice PH buffers in your soil, and give yourself some room to move around that PH range cannabis likes. The buffers will do their job.
For soil or substrates, you should take a sample and talk to your local university or other sources to get it tested. Or again, just make sure you have buffers if its not worth the hassle.
I did make a thread about my water report but it was some random site. Here is what I found unsure if it mentions pH.Your going to spend a lot of money on a decent ph meter. I've done a lot of research on accuracy, and the market is absolutely flooded with FAKE ph meters. They are literally fake and give you no accuracy. The ones that work are really expensive, and you have to maintain them to keep that accuracy. Even then, the way you measure with it can still make it inaccurate, because you are dealing with more variables than you think.
For just water, I would look into your areas water report, which is usually posted in a pdf online somewhere. It will tell you the last measured PH, and it is a good average. If you are using fertilizer solution, you can email the company and ask them what it is based on the PH of the water you are using. They will have a good idea of what it will be.
If you are still not sure, just make sure to include nice PH buffers in your soil, and give yourself some room to move around that PH range cannabis likes. The buffers will do their job.
For soil or substrates, you should take a sample and talk to your local university or other sources to get it tested. Or again, just make sure you have buffers if its not worth the hassle.
Those dont, but you are on the right track. Is that all there was?I did make a thread about my water report but it was some random site. Here is what I found unsure if it mentions pH.