No, xx, it is not like that. We don't transplant for "fresh soil." We feed them more and more as they get larger.
So, my advice is to understand feeding, work with your feed plan and take notes. I am finding so many myths in the last 2 years.
Define "problem." Never mind.
These problems are many peoples' wildest dreams....we cannot forget that.
So, we cannot control the plant, only the environment. That is the very definition of Bonzai and Botany. Containers are a root environment. Too long in the environment will cause roots circling the container, instead of inner branching. We want to transplant before that. Too big a contain will stunt the root growth. Why? Too much transportable water. The roots get lazy.
I do 3 transplants in the first 3 weeks and I am done. I have a root ball, I can feed into a 30" plant in 8 weeks. BTW, I do that with 250W CFL.
Much cheaper.
So, the idea in all Botany, is to grow in small containers, and move up. The general rule of thumb is that a plant goes into a container that is only 2 inches bigger, than the last one, and before major circling happens. That keeps the roots actively branching. I use azalea cups, as the are designed for transplant.
So, if we get clear on concepts and forget about stains and gear, we can listen to the plants. We can try more food, more water, different sized containers and see what happens.
Right now I have 2 part of Blue Kush at 9 weeks old from clones. One pair I treated to early tansplants and moved them to daily feeding within 3 weeks. The others, I let sit in the 6" cups, and only casual feeding when they needed water, and got roots circling which you have cut into every 1/4 way around, so they branch.
The royal pair is 3 feet and the commoners are 2 feet tall. The stalks are 1/2" vs 1/4".
I predict the pampered yield may approach 2x of the common yield. And that is all about 2 weeks that I did not begin to feed them daily.
So, understand the concepts and do the experiments, carefully. We are investing an awful lot of time and $$, to not become deeply knowledgeable on general Botany. Then we can just forget this cannabis lore. Helps?