I decided screw it - Im going ahead full speed as is. The choices were 1) toss the clones and fuck this whole thing until next fall, or 2) buy an RO system or 3) just go for it and make do as needed. I choose door #3.
I cant be here twice a day to adjust PH all the time and Im going on a week long fishing trip next month, so they may not survive. On the other hand, these clones have survived all my attempts to kill them so far, so maybe they will survive that too
So - I lowered the PH waaaay down and let it run, then drained the whole thing and started over with fresh tap water and nutes. I got the PH to 5.69 late yesterday and this morning it had only risen to 5.94. Thats a big improvement over how much it had been going up over night. I hope the low PH run, and the flush used up or neutralized some of what ever is buffering the PH up so much.
I picked the best three clones and put them into the totes this morning. The one with the most/longest roots went into the NFT tote. The roots have the furthest to go to reach the water level in that tote. I put the one with the shortest roots into the E/F tote. Those roots only have maybe 3" to go to reach water. The last clone went into the Membrane tote.
The new growth on all three is looking pretty good.
Im going to monitor the PH change closely for the next several days and if it doesnt settle down enough, I will start playing with an idea I have for a slow acid delivery system. If that works, I can leave them alone for longer periods.
On another note, Ive decided to keep the rez temp around 66 deg F for now. The hope being to reduce risk of root issues with the lower temp.
I had been planning to run a sterile rez using pool shock - mainly for cost reasons and its simplicity.
BUT - then I read a scientific study on the use of chlorine, chloramine, H2O2, etc to treat and prevent root pathogens. According to that study, if you run high enough levels of chlorine, etc to actually kill the pathogens, it damages the roots and reduces growth. Running at levels that dont hurt the roots doesnt kill the bad stuff. Plus, active chlorine combines almost instantly with nitrogen in the nutes which reduces the availability of both in the system. Over all, that made it sound like a bad idea to go sterile with no up-side at all. Well, the one up-side would be if you went sterile from the beginning at moderate doses of chlorine, you might be able to prevent root pathogen growth from getting started - maybe - but at the cost of some damage to the roots.
Anyway, I decided to skip the chlorine and just keep temps down as long as possible. I will have some extra funds in a couple of weeks and will order some Hydroguard to use instead.