Herb & Suds
Well-Known Member
Junk ! any questions ?
You might as well be using baking soda and a dripper
You might as well be using baking soda and a dripper
a couple steaks and a bottle of wine.
Once again your plant kung fu is dead on. The bottles die after a few days, not worth the money, bags are producing about same as ambient co2. Ill be saving 40 dollars or making own before buying ever again.Anyone who says they are not useless doesn't know what they're talking about. I don't have to waste my money to come to the conclusion that they're worthless.
Testimonials on the website and Amazon reviews are garbage and mean nothing. Those bags are worthless but feel free to waste your money on them. I'd rather spend it on a couple steaks and a bottle of wine.
The only reason they sell those bags is because people are foolish enough to waste their money on them.
Hey, old thread, but wanted to share my very limited experience with co2, that seems to contradict that everything else needs to be perfectly dialled in for it to have any effect at all.The bags are hit or miss, this is from a veteran HVAC tech with a calibrated extech meter.
You also need a closed loop system with passive or active fresh air intake for cooling and pressure venting only from the top (c02 sinks hot air rises)
I would suggest getting into mushroom cultivation if you want real output. A 5 gallon bucket setup of loins mane mushrooms will generate half its weight in CO2 hourly.
Gotta agree with Mont@n@, your household ambient co2 could naturally run higher than your plants could ever hope to use. I have 3 adults and 3 German shepherds and average 1400 ppm with active cold air intake and occasional open windows.
Dont forget also that co2 is absolutely worthless unless EVERYTHING ELSE IS DIALED IN FIRST. I repeat, EVERYTHING.
If there is any lack of light, disease, or deficiency the plants won't benefit in the slightest.
You need very intense light for CO2 addition to make a difference. Also, as others have stated, if your grow is in a space where people live, you will have naturally (significantly) elevated CO2 levels already. There is this one YouTuber who shows his automatic CO2 setup and then mentions that it barely ever runs because his household air already contains close to the maximum useful (elevated) levels of CO2 anyway.So I'm left with the sense that increasing co2 levels will help a grow even if all other parameters are not optimised?
You think the cost and effort to install nutrient injector system is less than adding a CO2 tank, regulator and plug in controller? Nutrient injection system $3-5K and need reservoirs, mixing tanks, piping, fittings , pumps vs $~300-500 for a rocking CO2 tank setup. I just setup CO2 in my veg room for $250 CADYou need very intense light for CO2 addition to make a difference. Also, as others have stated, if your grow is in a space where people live, you will have naturally (significantly) elevated CO2 levels already. There is this one YouTuber who shows his automatic CO2 setup and then mentions that it barely ever runs because his household air already contains close to the maximum useful (elevated) levels of CO2 anyway.
I'd rather build a fully automated grow, with nutrient injectors and the jazz before even considering adding active CO2.
He grows a single auto on his balcony. Hasn’t the slightest clueYou think the cost and effort to install nutrient injector system is less than adding a CO2 tank, regulator and plug in controller? Nutrient injection system $3-5K and need reservoirs, mixing tanks, piping, fittings , pumps vs $~300-500 for a rocking CO2 tank setup. I just setup CO2 in my veg room for $250 CAD
sounds to me like you are completely clueless to the effort and setup cost of either item. And once again arm chair growing.
I think if you have lighting, cooling, good nutrients and ventilation/air movement then supplementing CO2 is a welcome addition to a grow. CO2 is a great cheap upgrade let's you get away with higher temps and humidity in exchange for greater growth. That being said the mushroom bags literally cost the same as an industrial sized fill of a CO2 tank. Dunno why people waste their time with the mushroom.
Thanks for the input @ComputerSaysNo, @MidnightSun72.You think the cost and effort to install nutrient injector system is less than adding a CO2 tank, regulator and plug in controller? Nutrient injection system $3-5K and need reservoirs, mixing tanks, piping, fittings , pumps vs $~300-500 for a rocking CO2 tank setup. I just setup CO2 in my veg room for $250 CAD
sounds to me like you are completely clueless to the effort and setup cost of either item. And once again arm chair growing.
I think if you have lighting, cooling, good nutrients and ventilation/air movement then supplementing CO2 is a welcome addition to a grow. CO2 is a great cheap upgrade let's you get away with higher temps and humidity in exchange for greater growth. That being said the mushroom bags literally cost the same as an industrial sized fill of a CO2 tank. Dunno why people waste their time with the mushroom.
The tinkering is fine, who doesn't love that? I'd rather tinker with things that either (a) make my life easier, e.g. automatic watering so I don't have to do that myself and/or (b) definitely and significantly improve results and/or (c) save me money.If it all comes to nought, you can all tell me you told me so. I'll still have enjoyed the tinkering.
Don't worry, I'm tinkering with ALL of it.The tinkering is fine, who doesn't love that? I'd rather tinker with things that either (a) make my life easier, e.g. automatic watering so I don't have to do that myself and/or (b) definitely and significantly improve results and/or (c) save me money.
CO2 is probably one of the last things worth optimizing, after you have checked a whole bunch of other boxes.
There are so many things that are easier or more fun to improve than CO2 enhancement (plant genetics, lighting, nutrients, temperatures, humidity, pH level, watering, root health, ...). And each of those things probably will affect yield much more than CO2 enhancement would unless everything else is perfect already...
You definitely need a meter to be sure your CO2 measures work at all, and even then it will be difficult to get verified results (as far as yield goes). You would have to do at least two runs ruling out most other factors, i.e. having close to identical plants both times, same nutrients, lights, temps etc. etc. before you can even make a comparison. And then I would not accept anything less than a substantial improvement.
Sugars on sale at Chef's Store. $27.99 for 50 lbs.In my first grow I decided that I was going to take my home brewing experience and put it to use in the tent. So I loaded up a bunch of bottles with sugar water and yeast and put fermentation locks on them so I could monitor the manufacture of Co2.
Here is what I learned, sugar is expensive.
What is this lung room you speak of?As many others I was looking into these and I am already aware that ppm increased with people in the house and that the optimum is a sealed room etc. years ago I remember reading up on this alongside many other basics and that although a dialed in setup and an experienced grower will benefit from a professional co2 setup, it was actually more crucial to maintain the co2 didn’t drop below 400ppm. Most personal grows are in a home and this shouldn’t be a problem but I think for the cost it can’t be a bad thing to throw in and forget about? I’ve seen various information saying they increase or they don’t increase the ppm and the same amount of posts saying they had increased growth and no difference. To be fair, there’s way too many variables to take in account for a fair comparison. I don’t reject science of no change to ppm but you’d probably need to repeat it at least once to make it fair in case it’s a faulty bag. If so I’d use that to claim a refund or replacement anyway? if someone has a side by side with exactly the same conditions I’d be convinced one way or another especially if there’s any difference in growth rates, yield and quality alongside a ppm record. For the price I might just throw one in anyway, I have a tent as a kinda lung room before the veg room that exhausts into the flower room so if I put it in the lung room under the duct, whatever gets sucked out the veg room blows straight into the flower canopy anyway.