meangreengrowinmachine
Well-Known Member
So flushing is for toilets confirmed
most rain comes in the summer months for our country. and monsoons are in summer too. lmao.In autumn in rains, monsoon, etc
Do you understand what a ppm meter measures?Perhaps this is from over-fertilization.
Apparently they don't.Do you understand what a ppm meter measures?
If you do, you should understand why you got those results.
The ppm pen definitely cant distinguish nutrients from other solubles.Apparently they don't.
You can soak any plant matter in water and the ppm's will go up. Run some water through coffee and the ppm's go up. Much of that is caffeine. I could go out and take some radish leaves from my 100% organic garden and soak them in water and the ppm's will go up. They're using completely flawed methodology to come to their conclusion.
Instead of believing people that have actual degrees in the field of science they choose to believe what a couple stoners put in some books thirty years ago.
Exactly! It just measures ANYTHING in the water parts per million.The ppm pen definitely cant distinguish nutrients from other solubles.
You see it all the time here with people in a full on panic after checking their soil runoff.
Guess you haven’t been on the site very long.I’m sorry I didn’t mean you were dumb, nobody here is dumb
I don’t have any sugar. Could you make a video showing me what happens.that is incorrect. Try measuring sugar water with a tds meter.
From Hanna's website:
View attachment 5159435
EC is the baseline measurement. ppms are a conversion FROM EC so there is no “back to ppms”.what if he's using an EC meter and then converting his soaked buds back to ppms? does sugar read on an EC meter?
they are the same thing. TDS meters measure electrical conductivity and convert it to TDS. Ionized particles like salt increase conductivity of water, sugar does not..what if he's using an EC meter and then converting his soaked buds back to ppms? does sugar read on an EC meter?
one measures electrical conductivity and the other total dissolved solids. and yeah, you missed the joke too.EC is the baseline measurement. ppms are a conversion FROM EC so there is no “back to ppms”.
I didn’t miss the joke but I was correcting your incorrect statement.one measures electrical conductivity and the other total dissolved solids. and yeah, you missed the joke too.
a tds meter is not the same as an EC meter was my point.I didn’t miss the joke but I was correcting your incorrect statement.
ppms is a conversion from EC.
How are ppms measured?a tds meter is not the same as an EC meter was my point.
which was replying to your smart ass reply to waterproof about a hanna tds meter and posting a video . you getting it yet?a tds meter is not the same as an EC meter was my point.
EC is looking at how well electricity can pass through the substances that are present in the water. TDS is looking at the dissolved solids in the water and looks at both EC generating particles as well as particles that don't conduct electricity which is where the main difference occurs
The two principal methods of measuring total dissolved solids are gravimetric analysis and conductivity.[4] Gravimetric methods are the most accurate and involve evaporating the liquid solvent and measuring the mass of residues left. This method is generally the best, although it is time-consuming. If inorganic salts comprise the great majority of TDS, conductivity-based methods are appropriate.