Do I need to worry about co2 concentration?

_mahavishnu

Well-Known Member
Hey fellow growers

I have an indoor grow slowly getting up to speed right now. It’s in a shed on my property, and one of my biggest concerns is that the shed itself doesn’t have any ventilation. It has four windows, one of which has an AC unit in it at the moment. The AC unit does not have an option for fresh air intake or exchange.

For now, I’m keeping another window cracked (with bug screen installed, but we know that’s not enough filtration to stop all pests or spores) and the plants in there are only a few weeks old, so I’m not stressing it now, but when these plants are big and mid-flower, do I run the risk of the co2 concentration falling too low without some kind of fresh air intake? I’ve been trying to google and find threads discussing this but haven’t found anything at all along these lines, just talk of co2 systems, and I don’t have the experience to judge it myself. Assuming that window weren’t cracked, random air leakage around the structure or AC unit definitely wouldn’t be enough to replenish the co2 that the plants respire, right?

I’ve been thinking of adding an active filtered intake using one of those window AC unit exhaust vents attached to a typical 6in fan and ducting, with the cracked window becoming a passive exhaust. Mostly I’m trying to determine if that setup is actually necessary to keep my plants photosynthesizing. If you all agree that I definitely need fresh air intake, is that a good setup, or is there a better way for me to accomplish this?

Obligatory pics while I’m at it:

Seedsman Super Silver Haze OG
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Seedsman White Widow
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Dinafem Critical Plus 2.0
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Gorillabilly

Well-Known Member
Theoretically the shed could be sealed up well enough to be an issue but I seriously doubt it. I grow in a tent for flower and it only has natural intake when ac is on.

I have never had an issue. My problem is keeping it in the tent without a split system when running co2 addition.
 

BluntMoniker

Well-Known Member
The window A/C unit IS your fresh air. Its pulling in air from outside, cooling it as it passes through an air filter inside (usually flimsy and dirties up often though) and then finally into your grow space.

Your concern should not be fresh air in, but exhausting air out in a way that prevents unwanted odors. But for now you should be fine in terms of fresh air intake
 
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Gorillabilly

Well-Known Member
The window A/C unit IS your fresh air. Its pulling in air from outside, cooling it as it passes through an air filter inside (usually flimsy and dirties up often though) and then finally into your grow space.

Your concern should not be fresh air in, but exhausting air out in a way that prevents unwanted odors. But for now you should be fine in terms of fresh air intake

Edit: Also, plants breath CO2 in and release oxygen. CO2 buildup would never be a concern unless you were running a CO2 system
I think he's worried about too little co2 if its sealed to much.
 

_mahavishnu

Well-Known Member
Cool, thank you guys for the reassuring replies. I don’t believe that AC units typically draw fresh air when they’re running, they draw through the filter on their front face, cool that air via the coils, then blow it back out. It would be inefficient for it to have to bring outside air down to the desired temp when the inside air cooled by the previous cycle is only 1-2 degrees above target. Either way, your replies lead me to believe it doesn’t matter. As long as nobody has had a problem with co2 levels in this sort of situation I’m just gonna stop thinking about it.

Cheers! Gonna go smoke some OG and make a burger or something. Maybe I’ll start journaling this grow once they’re a little further along.
 

TintEastwood

Well-Known Member

TintEastwood

Well-Known Member
they draw through the filter on their front face, cool that air via the coils, then blow it back out.
That is how my window shaker operates.
Some units have fresh air intake as an option.

Some Co2 techno of possible help. Applies to non supplemented grows as well as supplemented.
 

_mahavishnu

Well-Known Member
You, and your grow deserve to know. :weed:



I do love me some scientific method, thanks for that link. I’m just gonna let it all rock for the time being, but I might have to grab that reader sometime before flip just to keep my mind at ease. I don’t wanna get into co2 supplementation unless I have to, and if my room really does turn out to be running below average atmospheric level, I’ll try some intake first. This is my first indoor grow, on the heels of my first ever grow, so I’m trying to stick to basics and not get in over my head (at least til I have enough bud to hold me over if I screw up and have to start again)
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
You, and your grow deserve to know. :weed:



I have a couple of the Hydrofarm APCEM2 loggers, they are super handy. They make another model, looks the same but takes a memory card if you wanna load the data into your computer, I didn't bother with that.
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
Many window AC units I have used / seen have a little fresh air intake port that can be opened or closed to allow just a little bit of outside air into the air stream.
 
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