MJCanada
Well-Known Member
Can somebody confirm this.
If I PH my water going in, let's say it's 6.5
My run off reads 6.6.
I assume my soil PH is higher than the PH going in, as the PH had to climb because of what it mixed with going through the soil.
Is there a general rule of thumb about what the soil PH is?
Something like
PH(water/in)+ 2*(PH(water/in) - PH(runoff/out)) = PH(soil)
The above assumes the run of would test exactly in the middle of the water in, and the soil ph.
6.5 + 2* (6.5 - 6.6) = 6.7
My soil is roughly 6.7?
(didn't test the equation for if run off is lower than water in... I think you have to - the 2*(in-out) if in > out)
If my soil comes in above 6.8, I'd want to pour water(or nute mixed water)in at 6.5 to bring it down to within 6.5-6.8(cause this is soil). I also assume you do this slowly unless you are flushing because of a lockout or some shit.
If I PH my water going in, let's say it's 6.5
My run off reads 6.6.
I assume my soil PH is higher than the PH going in, as the PH had to climb because of what it mixed with going through the soil.
Is there a general rule of thumb about what the soil PH is?
Something like
PH(water/in)+ 2*(PH(water/in) - PH(runoff/out)) = PH(soil)
The above assumes the run of would test exactly in the middle of the water in, and the soil ph.
6.5 + 2* (6.5 - 6.6) = 6.7
My soil is roughly 6.7?
(didn't test the equation for if run off is lower than water in... I think you have to - the 2*(in-out) if in > out)
If my soil comes in above 6.8, I'd want to pour water(or nute mixed water)in at 6.5 to bring it down to within 6.5-6.8(cause this is soil). I also assume you do this slowly unless you are flushing because of a lockout or some shit.