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Questions for my growbox

megaskunk

New member
"Hi everyone, I'm a newbie grower and after a cycle with a 400W HPS, I upgraded to a Sanlight EVO 5 100 LED because of the high temperature from the HPS (it reached 32°C). So I started a new cycle with 4 plants in a 100x100x200cm grow tent. I have a 150cfm fan, I used soil from a specialist and good seeds. During the first month, I used the lamp at 70%, then switched to full power. Now it's almost 2 months and the plants are starting to have problems: the leaves are drying out, they're thin, the plants are very light green and the flowers don't seem to be growing very big... What am I doing wrong? I also gave them some fertilizer, which I never used with the HPS... With only 3 weeks left until harvest, I'm feeling a bit down. Can anyone give me some advice? In theory, my Sanlight should be a better product than any 400W HPS, yet it seems to be going worse.."
 

Creeperpark

Well-known member
Mentor
Veteran
When switching from HPS to LED one needs to raise the hydroxyl content of the water to protect the leaves. LEDs discharge light with intense beams while HPS discharges light in flood waves. Adding cal-mag to your water when switching to LEDs is important. If you don't add cal mag to the RO water or dolomite lime to the soil-mix you will get leaf burn using LEDs. When you added fertilizer the plants declined more because the excess hydrogen made the leaves more fragile to burn causing even more bronzing. If your leaves are burnt you can't do anything to save them.

Every problem is a golden opportunity to learn something and get better. The more the problems you run into the more advanced your skills will become if you work through the challenges. Getting yourself an EC and pH meter will eliminate guessing and confusion. Testing the discharge and the intake liquid can tell a grower what they have or need. Make it easy on yourself friend get the meters and learn how to use them. So easy. Good luck.
 

megaskunk

New member
When switching from HPS to LED one needs to raise the hydroxyl content of the water to protect the leaves. LEDs discharge light with intense beams while HPS discharges light in flood waves. Adding cal-mag to your water when switching to LEDs is important. If you don't add cal mag to the RO water or dolomite lime to the soil-mix you will get leaf burn using LEDs. When you added fertilizer the plants declined more because the excess hydrogen made the leaves more fragile to burn causing even more bronzing. If your leaves are burnt you can't do anything to save them.

Every problem is a golden opportunity to learn something and get better. The more the problems you run into the more advanced your skills will become if you work through the challenges. Getting yourself an EC and pH meter will eliminate guessing and confusion. Testing the discharge and the intake liquid can tell a grower what they have or need. Make it easy on yourself friend get the meters and learn how to use them. So easy. Good luck.
"Thank you very much for your very professional response. May I ask you something else? I am Italian and I am translating with Gemini, so I have trouble understanding the acronyms.

So you recommend that I get a pH meter and a second meter for what? What exactly do you mean? Can you recommend any specific meters?
To provide more information, I am obviously using autoflowering seeds with an 18/6 light cycle."

Thank you!
 

Creeperpark

Well-known member
Mentor
Veteran
"Thank you very much for your very professional response. May I ask you something else? I am Italian and I am translating with Gemini, so I have trouble understanding the acronyms.

So you recommend that I get a pH meter and a second meter for what? What exactly do you mean? Can you recommend any specific meters?
To provide more information, I am obviously using autoflowering seeds with an 18/6 light cycle."

Thank you!
TDS meter, (total dissolved salts) measures parts per million. or EC meter, (electric conductivity). You can watch the ppm or ec in the soil using one of these meters. I prefer ppm over EC.
 

megaskunk

New member
TDS meter, (total dissolved salts) measures parts per million. or EC meter, (electric conductivity). You can watch the ppm or ec in the soil using one of these meters. I prefer ppm over EC.
I am very grateful for your assistance. Could you please direct me to a resource where I can find a sample table outlining the necessary substances and their approximate quantities for my specific requirements?

From what I understand, using LED lights will require different things compared to HPS, and probably different values. Or is there a standard table that i should respect?
 

IC GLASS

Member
"Hi everyone, I'm a newbie grower and after a cycle with a 400W HPS, I upgraded to a Sanlight EVO 5 100 LED because of the high temperature from the HPS (it reached 32°C). So I started a new cycle with 4 plants in a 100x100x200cm grow tent. I have a 150cfm fan, I used soil from a specialist and good seeds. During the first month, I used the lamp at 70%, then switched to full power. Now it's almost 2 months and the plants are starting to have problems: the leaves are drying out, they're thin, the plants are very light green and the flowers don't seem to be growing very big... What am I doing wrong? I also gave them some fertilizer, which I never used with the HPS... With only 3 weeks left until harvest, I'm feeling a bit down. Can anyone give me some advice? In theory, my Sanlight should be a better product than any 400W HPS, yet it seems to be going worse.."
It sounds like your plants might be experiencing some stress or nutrient imbalances. Even though your Sanlight EVO 5 LED should be a great upgrade, there are a few things to check. Ensure your LED light is not too close to the plants, as this can cause light burn and stress. Also, check if your pH levels are within the optimal range for your soil and nutrients, as imbalances can lead to nutrient deficiencies. Finally, over-fertilization can also cause issues; make sure you're following the recommended feeding schedule. If you adjust these factors, you might see improvement in your plants' health before harvest.
 

megaskunk

New member
It sounds like your plants might be experiencing some stress or nutrient imbalances. Even though your Sanlight EVO 5 LED should be a great upgrade, there are a few things to check. Ensure your LED light is not too close to the plants, as this can cause light burn and stress. Also, check if your pH levels are within the optimal range for your soil and nutrients, as imbalances can lead to nutrient deficiencies. Finally, over-fertilization can also cause issues; make sure you're following the recommended feeding schedule. If you adjust these factors, you might see improvement in your plants' health before harvest.
I'm considering the possibility of a thermal shock as well, along with the obvious nutritional issue.
I wonder if, as the seller told me, since the lamp has a power comparable to a 600 HPS, it's worth using it at 80% without necessarily reaching 100%.
Here's what confuses me:
I measure the pH and aim to keep it between 6 and 7, but how do I determine the exact amount and type of substance to add before the problem?
You might suggest "using a meter" but does the meter actually specify which substance is deficient and how much I need to add?
 

doc_loomis

Well-known member
Imo, the most important metrics haven't been discussed yet. What's your climate?
Also, as @chilliwilli said, a pic would definitely help with helping you.
And another thing to be aware of, soil is buffering whatever you put into it as nutrients, and you'll probably only see a difference after a week or two. Which is way too late usually. And as @Creeperpark said, once the leafs are burnt/yellow/rusty/not green in any way, you won't get them back.

With soil, you're not really able to steer into any direction. If you don't want to go the pH/ec meter route (which you should in any case), you can go with living soil. I've only heard good things about it, and you just need to add water.
 

Rocket Soul

Well-known member
D
Hey OP

Coming from HPS to leds its important to adapt to the new light, at high intensity your grow should be at least 26C. With hps this is the ceiling for temps, with leds (on high intensity) ots the floor.

Read up on vapour pressure deficit (though i dont know where youd be able in italian) - this is the way to get your plants to drink properly with leds. No drinking no nutes. Its also very common to have to increase nutes in a led grow. You will defo need a good ec meter to get this right and check both ec of input and output.
I would not recommend solid nutrients in soil for a new led grow it gets too complicated to correct and learn. Go for hydro type nutes.

For vpd charts try vpdchart.com.
 

megaskunk

New member
Imo, the most important metrics haven't been discussed yet. What's your climate?
Also, as @chilliwilli said, a pic would definitely help with helping you.
And another thing to be aware of, soil is buffering whatever you put into it as nutrients, and you'll probably only see a difference after a week or two. Which is way too late usually. And as @Creeperpark said, once the leafs are burnt/yellow/rusty/not green in any way, you won't get them back.

With soil, you're not really able to steer into any direction. If you don't want to go the pH/ec meter route (which you should in any case), you can go with living soil. I've only heard good things about it, and you just need to add water.
Right now, it's 25-26 degrees ( C°) with humidity fluctuating between 50% and 70%. I think I burned the leaves with too much water, with LED lights i need less
 

megaskunk

New member
Hey OP

Coming from HPS to leds its important to adapt to the new light, at high intensity your grow should be at least 26C. With hps this is the ceiling for temps, with leds (on high intensity) ots the floor.

Read up on vapour pressure deficit (though i dont know where youd be able in italian) - this is the way to get your plants to drink properly with leds. No drinking no nutes. Its also very common to have to increase nutes in a led grow. You will defo need a good ec meter to get this right and check both ec of input and output.
I would not recommend solid nutrients in soil for a new led grow it gets too complicated to correct and learn. Go for hydro type nutes.

For vpd charts try vpdchart.com.
Thnx man a lot!
 

Rocket Soul

Well-known member
D
Right now, it's 25-26 degrees ( C°) with humidity fluctuating between 50% and 70%. I think I burned the leaves with too much water, with LED lights i need less
Thats more or less in line with what it should be.

Burning the leaves with too much water makes no sense though, id forget about that. Seems like you dont use much nutrients, almost no fertilizer? This is probably the problem. My advice for led grow with high intensity is to use some type of hydro system, or even coco. Measure EC in and EC out, the runoff. Starting the light at 70% seems much to aggressive aswell, start lower. Always look for a plant that is transpiring well: you see this by checking the leaves- are they erect and pointing upwards or atleast horizontally or are they hanging? Hanging leaves means low drinking; either bad environment or too much or too little light; most likely too much.

To be honest this is hard to advice you on with no pics of how the grow progressed. Next time make a grow journal. If the english is to much work post it in the italian section and ask the guys who knows leds there for help and advice.
 

RequiredUsername

Well-known member
You didn't mention what light cycle you are using; I veg on 18/6 and switch to 12/12 for flower.
Bad advice for a short-day plant.

The right way: 18 on 6 off is **seedling** schedule. Vegetative is 12 on, 5.5 off, 1 on, 5.5 off. Flowering is 12 on 12 off, but taking a little light off each day until the last week is 8 hours light for finish. This will give you healthier compact plants and higher cannabinoid content.

If you follow the recent invention of "cannabis botany" (disinformation) on how to grow, you are growing a short-day plant under long-day plant lighting schedule, which is against long standing horticultural science.

Here is the difference in form on a highly uniform ancient cultivar, and how it responds. The plant on the left is grown under the correct light schedule for short day plants. The plant on the right was mistakenly (light automation in one tent was not changed from seedling to veg) left on the seedling schedule of 16 hours light.
20241214_131356.jpg

Difference being mainly leaf surface area, and internode spacing. When changed to flowering light schedule the plant on the wrong light schedule (16, 18, 24 hrs light) will stretch and grow a lot of stem. The plant on the left when put under flowering schedule lighting will not stretch very much, just enough to open up that secondary growth.

I took the time to write it up: https://www.icmag.com/threads/nickles-advice-for-new-growers-eco-friendly-grows.18133361/

More light = more growth, what bullshit people believe. It's not jack and the magic bean stalk.

With adequate intense light, like in a growbox the plant goes into photoprotection after it has what it needs.

Photoprotection is a forbidden word in the realm of the bogus cannabis botany. You are never supposed to know or understand what that word means.
 
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