Okay, couldn't find any info on that particular brand of coco but let's assume it is washed and buffered ?In a potting mix Bloome & Gardener coco and perlite. Light is Mars Hydro FC 3000 its at about 30%. Don't know what par is at.
You must be using tap water that has plenty already in the water.Hmmm, I have not seen this...
As I said, just switched from 600w MH/HPS to Phlizon FD6000 640w, feeding the same and still Not adding Cal/Mag or ph down.
Cheers
Well water with ppm of ~500, ph 7.5You must be using tap water that has plenty already in the water.
Please note how the plants look saggy, the saggier the more pale green: they are not transpiring. Achieve transpiration first; try vpdchart dot com with leaf temps -1 to -2 degrees(hope this ok with mods who dont like links, its just a vpd chart made easy and ajustable) for an idea of where climate should be. You defo need to run hotter temps than under any bulb, 79F is good as a floor, not a ceiling.
Nobody else does this, but it works for me. With no root activity in the soil I like to get the pH pretty high, almost to 8. I pH down the water to 6.3. When there are roots in the soil and the microbes are doing their thing the pH meter in the soil will read 4 or below. I call that sparking, and I think it is a sign of ions being transferred to the roots. Keep those microbes happy.Well water with ppm of ~500, ph 7.5
Cheers
I'm not sure we were told the temperatures. I don't see any runoff opportunity though. It's fabric to lose water, but stood in trays that keep the bags wetter. No waste, or natural drainage. They need lifting a bit. So there can be waste, and they can drip more. I think it must be cold in there. Their may now be excess salts at the roots to. Probably so, as it's coco.Please note how the plants look saggy, the saggier the more pale green: they are not transpiring. Achieve transpiration first; try vpdchart dot com (hope this ok with mods who dont like links, its just a vpd chart made easy and ajustable).
Once you see the plant transpiring: stiff leaf boners pointing outwards and not saggy leaves; then dial in nutes. In Coco, depending on buffer levels, you can use an extra strong feeding on transplant, and remove some of guess work of calmag.
Always water til runoff and measure ec in and out and make notes.
When adding calmag be careful to not add too much you can lockout K and get very weird looking defs. Transpiration first then dial in nutes. And then slowly up light levels, using more nutes as you go controlling and balancing runoff
The way i see coco transpiration is what keeps your roots happy cause its what dries out the pot. The faster your dry/wet cycles the better for the roots. When you pour a watering thru you pull in new air and O2 for the roots, thats the other reason for always looking for runoff other than the coco getting nute hot and the real need of measuring ec of run off. Of course theres a huge amount of stuff that can be wrong downstairs, but its surprising how easy it is to get a plant back to health in coco if you can water/feed and then feed a dry pot again in two or 3 days. Transpiration is a rising tide that lifts all ships, this is why i say start with it. Also if you fix nute inbalance, but then change how fast the plant drinks, youre back in unbalance. My 2 ctsI'm not sure we were told the temperatures. I don't see any runoff opportunity though. It's fabric to lose water, but stood in trays that keep the bags wetter. No waste, or natural drainage. They need lifting a bit. So there can be waste, and they can drip more. I think it must be cold in there. Their may now be excess salts at the roots to. Probably so, as it's coco.
Just some heat might fix the transpiration issue, but what's at the root, they probably won't like. I would lift them, and pour through a nice feed, to displace what they have. Being so wet, and likely to stay that way while ill, would mean h202 in that feed. To keep it oxygenated longer. A fresh start at the root, with some environmental changes, and I don't see why these wouldn't bounce back
Or just add like 20% watts incandescent light, on a dimmer. Thats like hid on tap. No need to fill that space with 400w of hid and see them fry.swap to hid the plants will rebound guaranteed
Or just add like 20% watts incandescent light, on a dimmer. Thats like hid on tap. No need to fill that space with 400w of hid and see them fry.
They look really healthy, and its a good demo of what healthy transpiration looks like. How many watts of led? To get an idea of ratiosI got a small appliance bulb that fits a regular e27 household standard socket, I think its 25w and cost about $3
I use it to provide radiant heat and IR in my basement tent where I make seeds. Temps are around 72f during lights on. Having one of there plugged in makes a difference.
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Be carefull and look out for stretch: incandescent has loooooots of far red which activate shade avoidance. Use the heat mat first but be careful as it can fry the roots. Maybe an on and off timer? If you see the plants green and transpiring i wouldnt worry too much about temps, its more in a only led environment.Only about 120w
Its a 18 socket SIL rack with 12w bulbs plugged in. Only 10 are on right now. I will probably plug a few more bulbs in if it starts getting colder and it looks like the plants need it. It might be a good experiment to see if the incandescent is enough, even if daytime temps are lower. I also have a heat mat on the floor there so I can kick that on if necessary but the idea is to do it using minimal electricity.
When I first started using LED it was a learning curve but im glad I figured out how to make them work for me in my setup because it means the different between running one 400w tent or two 200-250w led tents (2 x 4 tent)
Yea definitely Ill stick with the one bulb incandescent. I might put a few more LED bulbs on for heat if they just need a few degrees otherwise it’ll have to be the heat mat. Ive done flower runs with this heat mat underneath and its fine if the plants are raised off it a bit and have a fan down near the bottom of the tent. Which I like running air under canopy anyhowBe carefull and look out for stretch: incandescent has loooooots of far red which activate shade avoidance. Use the heat mat first but be careful as it can fry the roots. Maybe an on and off timer? If you see the plants green and transpiring i wouldnt worry too much about temps, its more in a only led environment.
you're probably growing with way lower temps than with a mh or hps light, i grow in living soil and never had cal/mag issues under cob leds so i really dont believe they need that much of mg in particular ( my water has plenty of Ca), check the VPD tooSince I switched to LED lights I have experienced issues with Deficiencies or lockout or something. They start out great and then the leaves start to look like shit. They get light in color then start to brown a bit. I never had issues like this using MH/HPS lights. I believe thats been my only change. If anyone has any thoughts i would love to hear them. Thanks