JacFlasche
Member
If anyone knows of a truly viable alternative to Dutch Masters Hydro nutes, which are filtered at 5 microns and haven't yet clogged one of twenty four tefen fogging heads -- please share your experience.
I am hoping to move to AA in the future. Soon as I can find a truly silent compressor at a good price. Are you using a Spray Systems Air jet fogger nozzle by any chance? https://www.spray.com/-/media/dam/sales-materials/a/airjet-fogger-c76-section-e.pdfIm a big fan of Jacks 321 Hydro. Nothing organic in it and it dissolves all the way. At the 0.2 to 0.8 EC levels I run, the rez looks perfectly clear.
Of course, you are still going to have to filter based on the orofice sizes you are running. I run AA aero and the nozzles Im using now have relatively large orofices compared to my old HPA nozzles - BUT - there is still the occational bug or piece of crap that seems to get into the rez some how, so filtering is always needed.
If you are running anything organic, that crap just builds up.
The only real difference is the operating pressure. HPA accumulators typically run a minimum of 80 PSI and up depending on your nozzles. With AA, the pressure fed nozzles Ive looked at seem to max out at maybe 60 PSI and the ones that seem more useful for us run from under 3 PSI to maybe 40 PSI max.What is the difference between a pressurized reservoir and an accumulator?
Good idea I think. How do your roots look? If they are nice and white, then you are doing fine. If they have fuzzy hairs, it cant get much better.I guess I should put a thermocouple in my root chamber. I have never even considered the temp in there.
I am presently using a 75gal polypropylene tuff tote from Home Depot. It's a little over 19inches tall. And it needs to be taller, but I have limited headroom.
I used a similar system while I was waiting for my pressure switches and solenoid valves. It was very noisy, lots of pump hammering. I use aquatec pumps too, but not the kind you can find on amazon. I had the tech guy at Aquatec spec out exactly what pump my system should use. There are hundreds of different combinations of options. The only place I could find them was a distributor in Cali. I try to keep my temp at 77 just under the first layer of leaves on my SCROG. I have been running AC a lot since I turned up my GeekBeast pro to more than 50% since they are flowering. Though 100% is just too bright and it burns them, so now they get 80% with IR and intermittent UV. Also I run a dehumidifier at this point to stop bud rot and that adds some heat. I am pulling about a gallon a day of water out of the air in my tent. My res is underneath the rooting chamber, no problem for the pump at all. I use a 50 micron filter bag inside the resevoir and a hundred mesh spin down filter then a 100 mesh inline filter before the pump, then of course there is a finger filter in each spray head. I use Dutch Masters hydro/aero nuitz and Drip Free, and so far have not had one clogged fogger. I do not DTW I use the same water over and over and when they started flowering it got pretty thick, still no clogged foggers. I have only dumped my res twice in two months. I will do it again this week even though the water is very clear in there. Then that is it till harvest.When I was doing HPA, I used a very simple set up. I set my rez higher than the pump inlet with a inline filter which kept the line full all the way to the Aquatec 8800. https://www.amazon.com/Aquatec-8800-Booster-Pump-Transformer/dp/B003ZJMSEY mist heads scattered around the large tote (~ 20g) > DTW. I have a Sentinel digital timer that was not accurate < 1 second, so I set it for 2 seconds; pause time depends on number of mist heads, size of tote.... Worked great. I would still use this set up except living in high heat climate I would need to run AC 24/7 in order to coddle the delicate root hairs, so I went to F & D
hth
Yeah, there are a bunch of thngs wrong with that video. Unless you have some very $$$ lab equipment there is no way to accurately measure droplet size. Plus, all nozzles produce a wide range of droplet sizes. This is usually expressed as VMD or SMD. VMD is Volume Median Diameter. SMD is Sauder Mean Diamater and is named after some Sauder guy Both are pretty technical when you get into it, but not very useful for us average guys without the special equipment. Very few nozzles have accurate VMD or SMD numbers available, but some do.This is the reason I chose it, though I did find his procedure for measuring droplet size questionable: