Advice or predictions from experianced blumat users please.

Flowki

Well-Known Member
I gave blumats a go a little while back but had mixed results, sometimes amazing, sometimes I had to disconnect certain ones and return to manual feeding. Back then I was using single 5L buckets to each individual pot in order to limit the damage of a single large run away res. In hindsight they were just too small, getting the correct flow rate due to lack of pressure as the water began to run low seemed to be the issue (I assume).

This time I wanted to try again but with 20L buckets, although they will only be filled to 15L. This hopefully means I only have to refill them every second or third day, while pressure can be maintained. Again, this is in order to reduce the flood risk of a single large res. I do have the capacity to catch any run away from the single buckets, but I do not at any point want to deal with a single 150L run away res and have to reset everything, along with all plants potentially suffering badly.

A large slave res is used in a cooled separate space, with a pump system to fill up the buckets that are in the grow space. This does mean heat within the buckets may be an issue, and I may need to add a drop or two of ph down on daily checks. I am using blumats mostly for the even and constant water distribution, rather than the idea of not having to enter the space for days at a time. Simple because the results when the blumats work were very good.

I have a good filtration system to ensure nothing enters the buckets, which have the lids on with access ports. I may top them up ever other day to reduce temps in the buckets while also levelling out the PH, and give things a little stir. I didn't notice any issues around heat last time, but the position of the bigger buckets are less shielded from direct light now. I know that heat has not been an issue otherwise, but how many days do you think would be too many, before heat and ph rises too much in the buckets?.


When the blumats worked well, roots would grow out of the coco in 2-3 inch mounds. They got so high they began blocking the drip lines. Although very annoying, I though that was a ''good sign'', but, could it actually mean the flow rate was too low and the roots were searching harder for water, and I should take that as a sign to increase flow?.

Back then I also read quite a few blumat users who preferred a smaller distance from blumat to the end of the drip line, somewhere around 4-7 cm if I recall (I followed that advice back then). The pots I am using are around 15L, and I have the drip lines a little longer this time at 9cm. The pots are on a slight incline due to the floor, with the blumat on the lower side and dripper facing out to the higher point. Would you say the drip line is too long?. I was hoping the longer line and the slight incline would seep some of the water back toward the carrot, but also allow a deeper watering in the pot. Or is it destined to flood that way?. I did not want to get into using 2 blumats per pot since it doubles the chance of a flood in my eyes. I do have the blumats to do that, if I am badly mistaken?.

They have only just been set-up so I can reduce the drip line distance as they are not really feeding yet. I followed the recommended hanging drop > 2 arrows back. I do wonder though, with a bigger pot can I just assume loosening the screw a full arrow after the initial wet phase is going to be a very likely starting point?. I seemed to be forever backing the screws off last time, in small increments.. but maybe that was due to the combination of low pressure and too short a drip line?.

I also reduced nutrient strength from manual feeding down to 3/4 strength. Off the top of my head the manual feeding was somewhere in the region of 800-850 elemental ppm total (correction, it is just under 600ppm being used now). I don't know if reducing it to that level is the right thing to do or not, given no run off. If you are using blumats with good results can you state what nutrients you use and at what strength (also general RH-temp levels?), so I can try and figure out a ball park range.

That aside, what are peoples opinions on manually feeding once per month to run off, as a safety measure against build ups or potential deficiency?. I'm not going to pretend I know exactly what a plant needs through every single phase in a pot that does not have run off. It does seem likely that I can add more plain ph'd water to individual blumat buckets that are building a toxicity. I noticed that issue last time, not all plants feed the same or are getting the exact same light intensity, N was building up in those lower feeders, but they are locked into what ever over all ppm would be in your master res. Reducing the N amount the meant those that were fine were begging to show issue. Did anybody else have this kind of dilemma?.
 
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Flowki

Well-Known Member
Are these bad questions?

I know it's a wall of text sorry, but I do massively appreciate experienced input, rather than learning things the hard way.
 

friedguy

Well-Known Member
Well I wouldn't say I'm very experienced... but...

I grew 3 runs of gorilla skittlez using blumats 1 year ago in a coco based living soil in 10gal fabric pots. It was a water only grow that got top dressed under the drippers. I sourced the water from 2 places-- 1 was straight from the tap and source 2 was from my RO filter. Each source had a blumat pressure reducer and a valve and I switched the sources a few times a week to provide calcium and micronutes without overdoing it.

I started with 2 carrots in each pot... one long one and one regular one. Each carrot had 2 drippers attached and distributed evenly. After tuning all the drippers and carrots they seemed to be working well for a while. A few days later the regular carrot didn't turn off and flooded my veg area. I reset the carrot, cleaned the mess and carried on with caution-- checking on things a few times a day every day. I then struggled to get them both tuned properly, one was either too wet or too dry.

This was a perpetual grow and when I moved this plant into flower I moved my next seedling into the veg area. When each plant was moved into flower I mulched with straw. This time I only used the long carrot with 3 drippers attached. All in all it was easier to work with 1 carrot than 2, but I still struggled to find the perfect moisture level in veg.

Rotated again, so I now have 2 plants in flower and 1 in veg. This time I set it up with only one of the regular carrots and 3 drippers. Had flooding... cleaned up, retuned and continued. Had to adjust the triangles all throughout veg. It was at this point I stopped the perpetual grow as I was not confident in the blumats.

All runs completed... not great, but completed. I believe this was due to the fact that I was new to living soil and didn't make a good enough batch. All my plants yellowed and started dropping leaves only a few weeks into flower.

Here's what I learned:
1. For me, the long carrots didn't have any flooding. Looking at this afterwards it seems that with no mulch in veg and using the fabric pots with a good amount of air flow, the top of the soil dried out faster, which pulled the soil away from the carrot a bit. Because of this it couldn't sense any moisture and stayed open. I believe my drippers were too far from the carrots as well. The longer carrots were deeper in the soil, where it stayed more moist and didn't separate from the carrot. Once these were in flower, with mulch, I had no more flooding issues and it seemed that the moisture level was much more even throughout. Location of the drippers would also have an effect on this.
2. I didn't have good luck mixing the regular and long carrots. With the living soil I was using it should be moist from top to bottom. As long as a mulch is used, the top shouldn't dry as much and the regular carrots should be fine.
3. The sides of my fabric pots were always dryer than the center. Roots at the edges didn't look great. I would use plastic pots if I were to do it again.

Here's my answers to your questions:
1. Pressure will absolutely affect the output. Keep an even pressure as much as you can. This is why I used the regulators with pressurized water.
2/3. Heat in the buckets could be an issue. I don't know your environment. Wrap them in some light and heat insulating material.
4. Drip interval should be based on the moisture of the soil.
5. Location of the drip line/drippers are critical. My advice is to keep them as close to the carrot as you can while still maintaining an even moisture level in the soil.
6. Pressure will definitely affect the adjustment of the carrots. I found I had to adjust them while in veg with my even pressure. Once in flower however, I didn't have to. I think this is mostly due to me adding mulch in flower and preventing evaporation from the top layer.
7. All organic water only. Temps were low 80s, rh was around 50%.
8. Because I was using a living soil, I didn't ever water to runoff (except for the flooding LOL). If you see or suspect salt buildup then you will need to though. This should only happen if the grow medium dries out-- which coco shouldn't.

My advice:
I recently switched to a SIP grow and I advise you the same. They have the same benefits of blumats (automatic, even watering), plus more (bottom watering, less cost), and less of the negatives (no flooding, less adjustments). I don't know if you can use synthetic nutes in a SIP, but I don't see why not. Maybe someone else will chime in.

I know it's not a very good comparison as my current SIP grow and previous blumat grow were so different, but attached are some pics. You can see how the SIP performs at least. The yellow looking, scraggly plant is the blumat grow at 6.5 weeks which vegged for 30 days in a 10 gal fabric. The other plant is my current SIP grow at 6.5 weeks which vegged for 30 days in a 1/2 gallon plastic grow bag (pheno hunting, had to keep them small). I've never watered the SIP grow from the top aside from a hit of recharge when they went into flowering. In the 3rd photo, you can see how the cover crop performed before I put the ladies in.

Hope this helps some.
 

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Flowki

Well-Known Member
I started with 2 carrots in each pot... one long one and one regular one. Each carrot had 2 drippers attached and distributed evenly. After tuning all the drippers and carrots they seemed to be working well for a while. A few days later the regular carrot didn't turn off and flooded my veg area. I reset the carrot, cleaned the mess and carried on with caution-- checking on things a few times a day every day. I then struggled to get them both tuned properly, one was either too wet or too dry.

This was

Hope this helps some.
Thanks for the input.

Last time I used blumats they were a pain, and I did have to learn and experiment out side the box a little from standard advice this time.

I don't use them in veg as I prefer wet/dry cycles to ensure roots fill the pots first. I know another guy on an automated system and he swears by this, so I followed suite.

I didn't see your post as no notification. They have been running over 1 week now and I think they are dialled in for flow. They are the small blumats, 1 per 15L pot. What I tried this time, was placing the carrot at the edge of the pot, and extending the drip lines to about 12cm long, so they are right next to the stems. I backed off the screws on account of the water they used each day. They are now about set, have not ran away and the pots are taking 5-6L each per day. One of the smaller ones did generate some slight run off, I shortened the drip line a couple cm and reduced the flow slightly, and will have to check on that tomorrow to see if it stops the run off. But I take that as a good sign, I want to be right on the limit of almost having run off, to stop dry spots.

Fingers crossed the smaller blumats will be able to supply the flow as the roots develop more, along with the higher uptake around mid run. I worry that the roots will compact up too much, and that moisture will not be able to reach the carrot because of that, drying the carrots out and keeping full flow on > run always. But I have to try this.. as their is no way in hell I will be able to supply the amount of flow needed with a short drip line, that was the main problem last time, not enough flow. In previous manual feeding they were on 6-7L per day at peak, with a little run off, so currently I am at that mark in the blumats in early phase, it's a good start, fingers crossed.

I don't mind if they run away when I think about it, as the catch trays will take most of it, and they will not dry out as a result. If they fail like that I can go back to manual feeding without much love loss. But I really want it to work, for better results. By mid run they will be using 7-9L each per day, and I've never got them to that level by manually feeding, so it is sure to increase yield if it works out.

Yeah I might consider some form of sip or manifold set-up if these fail again. I just like that fact I have separate buckets with blumats, as they segregate problems to only one blumat/bucket. Temps in the buckets do not appear to be a problem as of yet, and topping up every other day is regulating the ph, although it does not seem to be drifting much anyway. I was expecting way more drift in the buckets, so that's also a positive sign.

So far I have seen no issues around nutrients. I am completely undecided what to do around mid run, I was considering a 3/4 strength manual feeding to run off, in order to remove any excess build ups before I start slightly increase p/k and reducing N. But, if there are no visible issues around build ups, a manual run off feeding may just be temping fate.

It's still early days anyway, by next week I am anticipating some N build up, I always struggled to get that right last time. Too much or not enough.
 
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JustBlazin

Well-Known Member
Holy cow that alot of reading...lol
@Flowki you ever read the giant blumat thread on icmag? Alot of good info on there

I use a 120 l res, but its never filled past hard I'd say, I try and keep it between 1/4-1/2 full so if I do get a big runaway it's not 100 l I just add water 2-3 times a week.But the biggest runaway I ever had was less than a gallon and I've only had maybe 5 total most of which was just a small puddle to which I had to make a small adjustment to fix. I think a few of the reasons I got the runaway was too long dripper line, if it's to far from your carrot or to close to the edge.

How far from the edge did you put the carrot?
12 cm seems long but as long as it's going to moisten the carrot before running away then your good.

Lots of people use a regular home depot as a res.
Do you hook more than 1 plant to each bucket?
Can you not put you res outside your tent or grow room? In case the temp or light is a problem

I don't like to put my carrots less than 2 inches from the edge. Sometimes I put them in a 1 gallon so I have to put then about 1 inch from the edge. Don't like doing that as it's prone to crack easier and possibly creating a gap beside the carrot causing it to think it needs to constantly water.

Those root mounds are a good thing I believe, and the 9 cm line should be fine as long as its not to close to the edge.
When you installed them did you make sure to pack the holes the carrots were going into with a medium without perlite?

I'm a organic grower just living soil with top dress under the drip line so I don't have experience in coco and salt nutes they talk alot about it in the epic blumat thread on icmag. But I think your right to give a smaller dose as there are literally constantly being fed and no run off. I think you want it no run off but if you move your pot there's a moisture under the pot. If that makes sense...lol

The pressure definitely affects how well the blumat works.

Make sure if you ever bump into a pot or handle it roughly you push your carrot back down so it's snug.

Also was thinking about it, if you had a pulse meter with WiFi or something similar you can tell if you are having a runaway because you would see a spike in you humidity to 80-90 percent I'm pretty sure.
I noticed when I had the multiple litres on the ground the humidity would spike big time when I looked at my meters as I was soaking it up. That's just a theory, I will test it when I get a meter and a runaway I guess.

How high are your reservoirs?
The higher they are the greater the pressure. You want three feet minimum.
I got mine about four and a half feet.
The smaller carrots should give you enough pressure, it's the height that dictates the pressure

Glad to see they are doing well, hope they turn out great for you
 

JustBlazin

Well-Known Member
Well I wouldn't say I'm very experienced... but...

I grew 3 runs of gorilla skittlez using blumats 1 year ago in a coco based living soil in 10gal fabric pots. It was a water only grow that got top dressed under the drippers. I sourced the water from 2 places-- 1 was straight from the tap and source 2 was from my RO filter. Each source had a blumat pressure reducer and a valve and I switched the sources a few times a week to provide calcium and micronutes without overdoing it.

I started with 2 carrots in each pot... one long one and one regular one. Each carrot had 2 drippers attached and distributed evenly. After tuning all the drippers and carrots they seemed to be working well for a while. A few days later the regular carrot didn't turn off and flooded my veg area. I reset the carrot, cleaned the mess and carried on with caution-- checking on things a few times a day every day. I then struggled to get them both tuned properly, one was either too wet or too dry.

This was a perpetual grow and when I moved this plant into flower I moved my next seedling into the veg area. When each plant was moved into flower I mulched with straw. This time I only used the long carrot with 3 drippers attached. All in all it was easier to work with 1 carrot than 2, but I still struggled to find the perfect moisture level in veg.

Rotated again, so I now have 2 plants in flower and 1 in veg. This time I set it up with only one of the regular carrots and 3 drippers. Had flooding... cleaned up, retuned and continued. Had to adjust the triangles all throughout veg. It was at this point I stopped the perpetual grow as I was not confident in the blumats.

All runs completed... not great, but completed. I believe this was due to the fact that I was new to living soil and didn't make a good enough batch. All my plants yellowed and started dropping leaves only a few weeks into flower.

Here's what I learned:
1. For me, the long carrots didn't have any flooding. Looking at this afterwards it seems that with no mulch in veg and using the fabric pots with a good amount of air flow, the top of the soil dried out faster, which pulled the soil away from the carrot a bit. Because of this it couldn't sense any moisture and stayed open. I believe my drippers were too far from the carrots as well. The longer carrots were deeper in the soil, where it stayed more moist and didn't separate from the carrot. Once these were in flower, with mulch, I had no more flooding issues and it seemed that the moisture level was much more even throughout. Location of the drippers would also have an effect on this.
2. I didn't have good luck mixing the regular and long carrots. With the living soil I was using it should be moist from top to bottom. As long as a mulch is used, the top shouldn't dry as much and the regular carrots should be fine.
3. The sides of my fabric pots were always dryer than the center. Roots at the edges didn't look great. I would use plastic pots if I were to do it again.

Here's my answers to your questions:
1. Pressure will absolutely affect the output. Keep an even pressure as much as you can. This is why I used the regulators with pressurized water.
2/3. Heat in the buckets could be an issue. I don't know your environment. Wrap them in some light and heat insulating material.
4. Drip interval should be based on the moisture of the soil.
5. Location of the drip line/drippers are critical. My advice is to keep them as close to the carrot as you can while still maintaining an even moisture level in the soil.
6. Pressure will definitely affect the adjustment of the carrots. I found I had to adjust them while in veg with my even pressure. Once in flower however, I didn't have to. I think this is mostly due to me adding mulch in flower and preventing evaporation from the top layer.
7. All organic water only. Temps were low 80s, rh was around 50%.
8. Because I was using a living soil, I didn't ever water to runoff (except for the flooding LOL). If you see or suspect salt buildup then you will need to though. This should only happen if the grow medium dries out-- which coco shouldn't.

My advice:
I recently switched to a SIP grow and I advise you the same. They have the same benefits of blumats (automatic, even watering), plus more (bottom watering, less cost), and less of the negatives (no flooding, less adjustments). I don't know if you can use synthetic nutes in a SIP, but I don't see why not. Maybe someone else will chime in.

I know it's not a very good comparison as my current SIP grow and previous blumat grow were so different, but attached are some pics. You can see how the SIP performs at least. The yellow looking, scraggly plant is the blumat grow at 6.5 weeks which vegged for 30 days in a 10 gal fabric. The other plant is my current SIP grow at 6.5 weeks which vegged for 30 days in a 1/2 gallon plastic grow bag (pheno hunting, had to keep them small). I've never watered the SIP grow from the top aside from a hit of recharge when they went into flowering. In the 3rd photo, you can see how the cover crop performed before I put the ladies in.

Hope this helps some.
Sucks you didn't have the best of luck with them.
You have some good advise on the subject.
Agree with all the points. Except switching to sips...lol, nothing against sips they seem to kick ass just like blumats
Not sure you can compare a blumat plant that was grown in a soil that was lacking to a sip that you had dialed in. My guess would be they would both do about the same if they had the same soil and feeding regime, plus the blumat would have to function correctly
 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
Holy cow that alot of reading...lol
@Flowki you ever read the giant blumat thread on icmag? Alot of good info on there

I use a 120 l res, but its never filled past hard I'd say, I try and keep it between 1/4-1/2 full so if I do get a big runaway it's not 100 l I just add water 2-3 times a week.But the biggest runaway I ever had was less than a gallon and I've only had maybe 5 total most of which was just a small puddle to which I had to make a small adjustment to fix. I think a few of the reasons I got the runaway was too long dripper line, if it's to far from your carrot or to close to the edge.
I have a 150L slave res outside of the space, to keep cool. Inside the space, is the 20L buckets, being topped up to around 18L every other day. I checked the buckets every few days over the last week or two, and the PH has been surprisingly stable.


How far from the edge did you put the carrot?
12 cm seems long but as long as it's going to moisten the carrot before running away then your good.

Lots of people use a regular home depot as a res.
Do you hook more than 1 plant to each bucket?
Can you not put you res outside your tent or grow room? In case the temp or light is a problem

I don't like to put my carrots less than 2 inches from the edge. Sometimes I put them in a 1 gallon so I have to put then about 1 inch from the edge. Don't like doing that as it's prone to crack easier and possibly creating a gap beside the carrot causing it to think it needs to constantly water.
I have no real choice but to use a longer drip line. So far, some slight run off has happened in one or two of the catch trays, however that seems to be acting in my favour, like a part sip system, keeping all of the lower half of the pot moist. One drip line had to be shortened a little, and screw tightened a little, as it was giving too much run off, resulting in standing water. Hopefully that is the bench mark for me, get them to give a little run off, then back off a little to avoid standing water. I just hope the longer drip lines would have shown trouble already, if it was going to happen.

Those root mounds are a good thing I believe, and the 9 cm line should be fine as long as its not to close to the edge.
When you installed them did you make sure to pack the holes the carrots were going into with a medium without perlite?

I'm a organic grower just living soil with top dress under the drip line so I don't have experience in coco and salt nutes they talk alot about it in the epic blumat thread on icmag. But I think your right to give a smaller dose as there are literally constantly being fed and no run off. I think you want it no run off but if you move your pot there's a moisture under the pot. If that makes sense...lol

The pressure definitely affects how well the blumat works.

Make sure if you ever bump into a pot or handle it roughly you push your carrot back down so it's snug.
Yeah this time around the root mounds are not going huge so far, but I have a feeling it is because the entire pots are more saturated so the roots are perhaps not searching for water as much. One pot is doing it slightly, but rather than one small mound, the entire surface of the coco is beginning to bulge up with roots poking here and there. It is surely a good sign, but I just hope it doesn't end up cutting off moisture to the carrot. Although, if the accidental sip finding keeps working out, that should be ok too. My concern is now shifting toward ph in the coco, and hoping it does not start drifting with the lack of run off. I am also startingto wonder if the bottom of pots will be too wet an end up anearobic, but I can only try and find out I guess.

How high are your reservoirs?
The higher they are the greater the pressure. You want three feet minimum.
I got mine about four and a half feet.
The smaller carrots should give you enough pressure, it's the height that dictates the pressure

Glad to see they are doing well, hope they turn out great for you
The buckets sit just under the net, elevated 6" above pots, with short 12" feed lines. Given the short run and 20L volume, the pressure does not seem to be an issue as of yet, although I try best not to let the buckets drop below 5L. The only reason I got 20L buckets was for that, so that 5L acts as a pressure regulator, if you follow. The height and bucket sizes can't really be altered due to logistical limitations. If this doesn't work another plan is needed, be it sip or manifold. I can't get any better results with manual feeding, it is the bottle neck now.

Thank you for the response, I will take a look over on IC for more details, cheers.
 
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xtsho

Well-Known Member
This is how I place the blumats and the drip line in 3 gallon fabric pots of 100% coco. Carrot on one side and end of drip line on the other.

 

JustBlazin

Well-Known Member
I have a 150L slave res outside of the space, to keep cool. Inside the space, is the 20L buckets, being topped up to around 18L every other day. I checked the buckets every few days over the last week or two, and the PH has been surprisingly stable.




I have no real choice but to use a longer drip line. So far, some slight run off has happened in one or two of the catch trays, however that seems to be acting in my favour, like a part sip system, keeping all of the lower half of the pot moist. One drip line had to be shortened a little, and screw tightened a little, as it was giving too much run off, resulting in standing water. Hopefully that is the bench mark for me, get them to give a little run off, then back off a little to avoid standing water. I just hope the longer drip lines would have shown trouble already, if it was going to happen.



Yeah this time around the root mounds are not going huge so far, but I have a feeling it is because the entire pots are more saturated so the roots are perhaps not searching for water as much. One pot is doing it slightly, but rather than one small mound, the entire surface of the coco is beginning to bulge up with roots poking here and there. It is surely a good sign, but I just hope it doesn't end up cutting off moisture to the carrot. Although, if the accidental sip finding keeps working out, that should be ok too. My concern is now shifting toward ph in the coco, and hoping it does not start drifting with the lack of run off. I am also startingto wonder if the bottom of pots will be too wet an end up anearobic, but I can only try and find out I guess.



The buckets sit just under the net, elevated 6" above pots, with short 12" feed lines. Given the short run and 20L volume, the pressure does not seem to be an issue as of yet, although I try best not to let the buckets drop below 5L. The only reason I got 20L buckets was for that, so that 5L acts as a pressure regulator, if you follow. The height and bucket sizes can't really be altered due to logistical limitations. If this doesn't work another plan is needed, be it sip or manifold. I can't get any better results with manual feeding, it is the bottle neck now.

Thank you for the response, I will take a look over on IC for more details, cheers.
I don't think it's a problem to have you coco saturated to the bottom all the time, I think the ones that are almost to the point of run off will be your most productive plants.

Only 6 inches above your pot definitely seems risky, but I guess if the lines are super short from res to carrot then it might not be a problem. The head height is measured from the top of the water so if your pail sits 6 inches above the pot and your bucket is half full then it's really more like 12 inches or more head pressure.

Here's the epic thread I suggest giving it a read if you have the time. Some really helpful info on there

 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
This is how I place the blumats and the drip line in 3 gallon fabric pots of 100% coco. Carrot on one side and end of drip line on the other.

Ah that's good to see, mine is somewhat similar. The carrots are about an inch from the side of the pot and the drip line is then just past the main stem. My pots are about a foot wide so I felt pushed into doing it that way, the drip lines look about as long as yours, give or take.
 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
I don't think it's a problem to have you coco saturated to the bottom all the time, I think the ones that are almost to the point of run off will be your most productive plants.

Only 6 inches above your pot definitely seems risky, but I guess if the lines are super short from res to carrot then it might not be a problem. The head height is measured from the top of the water so if your pail sits 6 inches above the pot and your bucket is half full then it's really more like 12 inches or more head pressure.

Here's the epic thread I suggest giving it a read if you have the time. Some really helpful info on there

Yeah fingers crossed it all works, the setup isn't exactly run of the mill, so any problems are my own fault. On the pluss side I am thinking it may be a lot easier to deal with any toxicity build ups in certain pots. I can just add some plain ph'd water into the buckets to dilute the ppms a bit. Not so easy when just using one large res, so hopefully that's the perk for the extra work. Cheers for the link.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Ah that's good to see, mine is somewhat similar. The carrots are about an inch from the side of the pot and the drip line is then just past the main stem. My pots are about a foot wide so I felt pushed into doing it that way, the drip lines look about as long as yours, give or take.

I also have my res about 3 ft off the floor. I have a metal shelf right next to the tent. It's so nice just to mix up some nutes, pour them in the res, and walk away.

 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
I also have my res about 3 ft off the floor. I have a metal shelf right next to the tent. It's so nice just to mix up some nutes, pour them in the res, and walk away.

Hahah now you are just making me envious. Yeah mine isn't that simple, but hopefully worth while for the constant watering benefits.

Oh btw, if this works out, I was thinking of setting them up a little differant next time. Instead of backing the screw off 2 arrows at a drip, would it be a good start to just leave it at a hanging drip?. It is absolutely certain I will have to back them off as the days progress from initial set-up.
 
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