I guess it's a matter of troubleshooting. It's exactly like I have to do at work when troubleshooting computers and networks:oh, and i put some extra holes in my domes and clone cups to reduce moisture a little. right now it is no worry because i have plenty of stock to take clones from right now. but i would like to put some clones in flower soon!!
i will try daniels idea of not misting the plants, and I will also reduce my misting to once a day. i have a couple of fresh clones i just took Tuesday or Wednesday. still gotta get pics of the light shade for ya!
- Only make multiple changes on things where the result is predictable.
- Only make single changes where those changes are unpredictable. This way you have a predictable "rollback" point in case that change gives negative results.
- When everything is totally falling apart, take everything away except the bare essentials and a known predictable state, then start adding back changes one by one again.
Too often I cheat when troubleshooting things and try too many things at once and get "burned". Suffering through a few major rollbacks finally gets you to wake up and slow down!
So I think you are moving in the right direction in removing moisture but be careful and not go too fast in the process! Unless the patient is coding on the table, or you realize you made a drastic mistake, only make 25%-50% changes. Even though they look over-watered, you might remove 75% of the moisture when it may only take a 10% reduction to get them to a happy place.