krazycure
Active member
dry active yeast of ANY kind is activated when mixed with water, period. Doesn't matter what kind. Take what you read on OG with a grain of salt. Brewer's yeast will last longer as it's able to survive at higher alcohol %'s, but is hard to find, so I use bakers yeast with no problems. I will add the method I described in your thread here: not really mine as it's been done before, but I thought the filter was a nice touch. laugh.gif
BTW, if you don't care for the smell of yeast and sugar CO2, then you'll HATE the smell of the vinegar and baking soda cube idea! The cannibusculture link is SPOT on, and a GREAT read for a brief overview of CO2.
Collection of my diatribes on the subject:
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Homemade CO2 Tanks:
2.5 Liters of water + ~1/2 pound sugar + tablespoon of yeast + 3L bottle.
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Pre-mix sugar in tap water which has been left out for a couple of days to let the chlorine evaporate (it will kill the yeast otherwise, you can also use RO or distilled water to skip the chlorine removal step). Pour another hefty scoop of sugar directly into the empty tank, then pour the sugar water in over it. Don't swirl. Next, add yeast to a small seperate amount of water and stir until it froths a bit (activated). Pour this into tank as well, and swirl gently (not enough to disturb sugar layer on bottom). An airtight tank like this will produce CO2 for around 4-5 days at which point the sugar must be re-introduced. Don't run this system without some kind of exhaust for the CO2, or it will explode! By airtight, I mean with the additional filter:
An optional (but highly recommended) addition to this system is a small filter or airlock. Run tubing from the top of the tank down into another smaller container. Fill this small container with a small amount of water or better yet, isopropyl alcohol. Run the tube from the tank thru the cap of the filter and down under the water level in the filter. Then, add another tube in the cap of the filter above the water level leading directly to your grow area.
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Please do not underestimate the multipurpose usefulness of the filter. Besides being able to tell exactly how much CO2 is being released, it's an excellent catch for bacteria and prevents air from seeping back into the tank which will stall the fermentation process. Yeast only needs a little bit of oxygen present in the tank at the beginning of the reaction, afterwards excess O2 acts as a catalyst for the reaction. You can easily make one from just about anything, and it will save you headaches. I don't want to see your crop unimproved, or worse, molded because of my idea sad.gif
There ya go. Honestly, you don't have to get too technical. The yeast will reproduce so rapidly it doesn't matter how much you put in, and as long as the sugar water is pretty much syrup then it will make CO2.
Depending on how much initial pressure the water filter holds back (i.e. how much water is in the filter, I only have a cup of water in mine), the CO2 can take 4-8 hours to build up enough pressure to escape. Also, it will take a day or two for the yeast to get a good hold on the solution, it will multiply first, then start converting sugar to alcohol and producing CO2.
I just pour out half the bottle and pour in more pre-mixed sugar water every 4-5 days, or when I see the bubbles in the filter slowing down. I hardly, if ever, replace yeast. A yeast colony can survive even if 75% of it is destroyed from alcohol poisoning or dumping out or whatever. It's really the cheapest and best way to increase yields. Your females will LOVE you for it.
CO2 helping isn't a question of might, it will. I fail to see how anyone could not make the effort to introduce increased levels of CO2, read anything on plants and you'll see growing plants without it is like a human growing with exposure to sunlight once a month. Plants NEED CO2. They have for thousands and thousands of years, in fact, why do you think they were so much bigger in prehistoric times (don't make me put up a photo of fossilized jurassic plants)? Because there was ABUNDANT CO2 in the atmosphere at the time. Now, there's so little, if you don't supplement, you are robbing your plants of what their genetics can provide.
The fact is, plants can put CO2 to use immediately, they don't require saturation to take it in. It's true that this method will not make large amounts of CO2, nobody is claiming that it does. CO2 is just a byproduct of the reaction in the tank, not a primary reaction. The only requirement is that what IS produced must rain out *above the plants*. Even with ventilation, not all the CO2 will be sucked out right away, in fact, the air circulation inside the case will aide the CO2 in dispersal.
Sometimes people take this Co2 thing to new heights, like ALL iso in the filter (OVERKILL PEOPLE DON'T DO IT), you only need a few drops every day to keep it clean. Also, overkill on the sugar can cause problems. You want to provide yourself with a yeast culture, not a yeast MASS, if you use excessive amounts of either you're making a system that's not so great.