candle for Co2

amneziaHaze

Well-Known Member
i have been stalking some forums and i found about this

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what are your opinions on using candle for co2? i know its a huge fire hazard but except that doesnt look bad
 
last thing i need is plant thinking uuu more light lets get closer to it.

but maybe in the room that the box is in...
i dont need co2, just didnt know one candle can give soo much
 
The candle will certainly generate CO2, but as mentioned, it's a matter of ensuring that it's available to the plants.

If you have a co2 meter, you can objectively evaluate.

The effectiveness of CO2 enrichment is primarily dependent on your setup as far as air exchange, use of a lung room, temps, etc.

CO2 can work well in a tent but takes a bit of planning to ensure you're not immediately exhausting what you've created.

I wouldn't sleep well knowing there's an open flame in my grow room; even if done in a "sensible" way.
 
The candle will certainly generate CO2, but as mentioned, it's a matter of ensuring that it's available to the plants.

If you have a co2 meter, you can objectively evaluate.

The effectiveness of CO2 enrichment is primarily dependent on your setup as far as air exchange, use of a lung room, temps, etc.

CO2 can work well in a tent but takes a bit of planning to ensure you're not immediately exhausting what you've created.

I wouldn't sleep well knowing there's an open flame in my grow room; even if done in a "sensible" way.
i'd be worried if the levels got up too high too like 3000ppm. you'd need to have a setup/sensor to exhaust or intake fresh to get it back to safe levels
 
ono is a cemical specifically designed to bind to smells. dont know if scented candle binds soo well after burning doesnt matter it was used just to test ppms
 
i've got about 3 smoke detectors and 2 of those exploding powder balls in my grow area and the thought of an open flame still scares the crap out of me. lol.
I was using a metal tray to hold the lamp incase of a spill some how.. that way it was contained if that happend and wouldnt catch anything on fire.. (was my hope anyway)
 
As long as you use precautions (don't want to burn your house down) candles are great. Especially in winter if you're at a latitude where a few extra degrees of temp might help. Go with unscented candles though.
 
Oh come on guys.. using candles to generate co2 that you think will be beneficial on a scale to which it really matters?? This sounds ridiculous. The fire hazard aspect alone makes me think this is a terrible idea.
 
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