haole420
Active Member
last season was a disaster. whiteflies took over the coco grow. inadequate filtering and nutrient precipitation fouled the roots on the aquaponic side and i my plants prematurely died a few weeks early. i had to keep most of the harvest for myself, but i gotta say, considering all the shit that went wrong, it wasn't bad! couple things i learned: (1) go with a higher res volume/plant ratio, (2) don't use citric acid as a pH down, (3) keep the pH in the ideal range for the plants, not the fish, and (4) filter the solids out of the system.
the aquaponic cloner, which was the first aquaponic system i built, was still bulletproof after more than a year and a half. there's nothing to prove there: it works. in my opinion, there's no easier way to clone. no domes, no spraying, no hormones, no fuss. but, it had to go
i gutted the whole room to streamline my operation. no more cloning and veg for the time being. that should help out with getting heat and power consumption under control. reworked the ventilation so that my lights have a separate intake/exhaust from the room. also just upgraded the lights to dual fixtures, so i've got a 600watt HPS above each tray with 5 plants. at full power, that's 120watts per plant in a 9"x9" basket. at full capacity, that's 600watts/8 plants = 75watts per plant or 600watts/4.5 sqft = 133watts/sqft. right now both lamps are dialed down to 300watts each.
my new system is about 100 gallons and modeled after the University of Virgin Islands (UVI) system, which is one of the more popular ap system designs out there. i skipped the "bioball barrel" since my system has plenty of hydroton in it to provide surface area for the nitro bacteria. i also skipped the degassing barrel since there's plenty of aeration going in my lower res. i reused "dirty" parts and hydroton from the old two systems as bacteria cultures so i wouldn't have to cycle the new system.
my approach this time is to keep nute concentration relatively low in the 500-1000ppm range and to keep pH wandering between 5.5-7.0 or thereabouts. ideal pH for nitro bacteria is around 7-7.5 but nutrients start to precipitate out of solution at that point. i think they still do their thing down to pH of about 6.0, so i want to make sure i keep it going back and forth.
using citric acid seemed like a bad idea last season. i think it was killing my bennies and nitro bacteria, plus it couldn't hold pH worth shit. using 80% phosphoric acid and going with a res volume/plant ratio of about 10 gallons/plant. some claim it gunks stuff up, but i never saw that happen.
so far so good, with the exception of going overboard with the phosphoric acid. pH dipped way down to 3.2 and killed off some fish. those that survived the 4hr acid bath i know are resilient to low pH and can hang out at pH of 5.0 or higher all day. i found that the fastest way to bring the pH back up was to dump 5 gallons and refill with tap water (8.0+ pH, 250ppm).
clones came in rockwool blocks, which i buried in hydroton. algae seems to love rockwool and high pH but seems to have a hard time growing on hydroton, so i'm keeping the rockwool blocks completely covered with hydroton and the top inch or so of hydroton dry. i inoculated the rockwool blocks with great white directly before putting them into the system.
using tap water, phosphoric acid, calmag, CNS17, and eventually a bloom booster once things get going. feeding fish plain ol' goldfish food a few times a day. i might experiment with feeding them some chopped fruits and veggies eventually or adding a vermiponics bucket to the system.
two 32-gallon heavy duty gargage cans. lower one is fish tank with mostly goldfish and some local minnow species of some sort. upper one is vortex filter with crawdaddy, pleco, snails.
don't mind my mess on the floor. vortex filter drains to flood trays. the flood trays are connected, so there's only one autosiphon drain. autosiphon consists of 3/4" PVC drain pipe with 1-1/2" bushing to create the vortex, 3" PVC bell, and special "stealth" manifold underneath to keep it super quiet.
day 4
the aquaponic cloner, which was the first aquaponic system i built, was still bulletproof after more than a year and a half. there's nothing to prove there: it works. in my opinion, there's no easier way to clone. no domes, no spraying, no hormones, no fuss. but, it had to go
i gutted the whole room to streamline my operation. no more cloning and veg for the time being. that should help out with getting heat and power consumption under control. reworked the ventilation so that my lights have a separate intake/exhaust from the room. also just upgraded the lights to dual fixtures, so i've got a 600watt HPS above each tray with 5 plants. at full power, that's 120watts per plant in a 9"x9" basket. at full capacity, that's 600watts/8 plants = 75watts per plant or 600watts/4.5 sqft = 133watts/sqft. right now both lamps are dialed down to 300watts each.
my new system is about 100 gallons and modeled after the University of Virgin Islands (UVI) system, which is one of the more popular ap system designs out there. i skipped the "bioball barrel" since my system has plenty of hydroton in it to provide surface area for the nitro bacteria. i also skipped the degassing barrel since there's plenty of aeration going in my lower res. i reused "dirty" parts and hydroton from the old two systems as bacteria cultures so i wouldn't have to cycle the new system.
my approach this time is to keep nute concentration relatively low in the 500-1000ppm range and to keep pH wandering between 5.5-7.0 or thereabouts. ideal pH for nitro bacteria is around 7-7.5 but nutrients start to precipitate out of solution at that point. i think they still do their thing down to pH of about 6.0, so i want to make sure i keep it going back and forth.
using citric acid seemed like a bad idea last season. i think it was killing my bennies and nitro bacteria, plus it couldn't hold pH worth shit. using 80% phosphoric acid and going with a res volume/plant ratio of about 10 gallons/plant. some claim it gunks stuff up, but i never saw that happen.
so far so good, with the exception of going overboard with the phosphoric acid. pH dipped way down to 3.2 and killed off some fish. those that survived the 4hr acid bath i know are resilient to low pH and can hang out at pH of 5.0 or higher all day. i found that the fastest way to bring the pH back up was to dump 5 gallons and refill with tap water (8.0+ pH, 250ppm).
clones came in rockwool blocks, which i buried in hydroton. algae seems to love rockwool and high pH but seems to have a hard time growing on hydroton, so i'm keeping the rockwool blocks completely covered with hydroton and the top inch or so of hydroton dry. i inoculated the rockwool blocks with great white directly before putting them into the system.
using tap water, phosphoric acid, calmag, CNS17, and eventually a bloom booster once things get going. feeding fish plain ol' goldfish food a few times a day. i might experiment with feeding them some chopped fruits and veggies eventually or adding a vermiponics bucket to the system.
two 32-gallon heavy duty gargage cans. lower one is fish tank with mostly goldfish and some local minnow species of some sort. upper one is vortex filter with crawdaddy, pleco, snails.
don't mind my mess on the floor. vortex filter drains to flood trays. the flood trays are connected, so there's only one autosiphon drain. autosiphon consists of 3/4" PVC drain pipe with 1-1/2" bushing to create the vortex, 3" PVC bell, and special "stealth" manifold underneath to keep it super quiet.
day 4