May I humbly request "sticky status"?
I am "retired" at least for now , and would consider it a great honor.
Sounds like a slam dunk to me. This thread has helped me tremendously, and is responsible for me even being able to grow with my schedule.
Thanks a million, Sunnydog.
What's the best container, about 50 gallons, for a main rez? It needs to be longer than it is tall for my purposes. Would a Rubbermaid roughneck tote work well? http://www.homedepot.com/p/Rubbermaid-54-Gallon-Roughneck-Hi-Top-Tote-FG3A05H2MICBL/100673965
This is for an outdoor application. I love my constant water pressure system with one reservoir feeding another, but I won't be relying on a pump because it's outside, so I plan to elevate both and use a float valve, and I have limited height to work with, hence the need for a not very tall main rez.
I'm hoping to pick up the roughneck tote at home depot tonight barring any objection or better recommendations from you veterans.
Thanks so much!
I've been running blumats for about 5 days now on 2 plants and they've maintained a pretty constant amount of moisture in the soil. However overnight they both let out so much water that my drip pan thing had a like an 8th of an inch sitting in it. Could this be because I overwatered when I installed the sensors?
Setting up in coco posted by Jimmy Luffnan 12-07-2013
Blumats will work perfect in coco
Ive been using Blumats in coco and airpots for years now and distribute them.
Like you said, some people understand them, some dont.
I will give you some golden advice for your setup.
#1. If you are using coco, you want to have them set at maximum saturation (wetness)
One of the biggest mistakes people make with coco/blumats is having the medium too dry.
Remember that coco has perfect air to water ratio, it can never be too wet.
If the medium is too dry, the carrot will dry out and cause problems like air in the cone. Coco is hydro, not soil, so treat it like hydro. people follow the 'clinging droplet' rule on the instructions, but this only applies to soil.
#2 Always have the dripper hose at least 8cm, not shorter. Some people say that shorter gives better response, but it serves no use. Longer dripper hose means a larger drop which in turn means better penetration throughout the pot. Use of a dripper hose stake is important also. Always insert the carrot right up to the green but keep the end of the hose at least an inch off the ground or roots will grow up and into the hose.
Best way to setup for coco is:
Hand water until roots show at bottom of pot.
Insert prepared Blumat halfway between the stem and the outside of the pot and position the dripper line half way as well.
Tighten the blumat adjustment firmly, but not tight.
Water the pot slowly and thoroughly until water starts to drip from the bottom of the pot. Watering slowly will properly saturate the coco and give minimal waste runoff.
Allow the pot to sit and drain for 15 minutes.
Bleed nutrient through to the end of the main nutrient line (The larger tube from the reservoir) to remove all bubbles.
Now loosen the blumat adjuster so that nutrient lightly streams out of the dripper line.
Pull the dripper line that goes through the top of the Blumat through about 1cm and pinch to make sure it is not stuck together. This common happens as the dripper line can stick shut from the factory as they generally tighten the Blumat in production.
Tighten the Blumat slowly until it drips every 8-10 seconds (watch for about 2 minutes and count the time it takes to drip)
Check every day but dont adjust unless over flow is imminent.
If it is flooding a little, adjust the Blumat tighter by 1 increment every 3 days
If the pot feels a little dry or you would like a little more moisture, DONT LOOSEN TO MAKE THE DROPS FASTER! Just pull the dripper line out a little further from 8cm to 8.5cm and so on.
The perfect saturation would be wet with just a tiny bit of runoff, just enough runoff that it will simply evaporate in the saucer under the pot.
It is still recommended that you actually use a bucket under the pot for the first 2 grows as you will tweak with it as we all did and you will have a few floods here and there. A bucket will buy you some time to correct your errors without having a giant watery mess
As a personal note, I would recommend the use of H&G Drip Clean to your mix. It's cheap and lasts a long time. Reduces salt buildup and keeps your Blumat lines clean throughout the grow
Cheers!
Jimmy Luffnan
I don't think that trying to set the blumats up based on drip timing is the best way to go - too many other variables come into play.
The most accurate way of setting them that I've found to put the coco into a large tub and mix it up with nutrient/water until you hit the moisture level that you want. The plants are then transplanted into air pots with the pre-moistened coco, and the spike is installed at the same time. The feed water is left off for several hours to allow the blumat to equalize with the coco's moisture content, the water is turned on and the spike adjusted to a clinging drip. The blumat will now hold the moisture content that you have set regardless of the plant size, temperature changes, etc.
Well if his way works and so does yours and you both may or may not have to make minor adjustments in the following 7-10 days then it doesn't matter which way you get to point B. I tried his way and it still stopped dripping after 5 minutes and went cling drop so his way makes it set 1-2 arrows looser than the way Blumat says to set it for soil. I ended up setting it to cling drip + 1 arrow. Doesn't matter as I will get it set right by watching over the next week or 2. I kind of want a little over flow waste. So we'll see how it goes and I'll adjust as necessary. It's not rocket science.
No, it's not rocket science but they do have their own peculiarities. Blumats function by sensing moisture levels and will self-adjust to maintain the setting - that is what makes them unique. There are many other systems that work based on time intervals, and to my knowledge they all require adjustments as the plant gets larger or to compensate for environmental changes.
Understanding the way that something functions is key to optimizing it's usage. After you get your blumats set where you like, I would suggest that you try marking the cap with a white-out pen to keep track of the setting. My experience has been that it doesn't really change - plant size, pot size, temperature, harvesting a plant and leaving enough to re-veg, etc. are all irrelevant because the sensor is set to maintain a given moisture level. From what I've seen, any time that there is a sudden need for a higher setting it is due to crap in the 3mm line impeding the flow, almost always from a build-up at the pinch valve.
Also, I haven't had much luck with trying to keep a controlled level of run off. Once the media hits saturation levels, the sensors seem to be at the outer limits of control and get away once in a while. If you keep the EC levels down to a point where the plant is happy but not overfed and use Drip Clean at 1 ml/gallon, there is no longer a need for run off to purge salt buildup. YMMV.
Good luck.