How long to dechlorinate??

I have always sat water out in a 1 gallon jug for 24 hrs or more but now that I have 10 gallon pots I need alot more water. So I bought 5 gallon jugs and a air stone/ 10 gal. Air pump. I was trying to figure out how long it takes to dechlorinate that amount of water while using the stone? Any help would be appreciated
 

buyyouabeer

Well-Known Member
Depends on what it is chlorinated with; if they use chloramine it will not evaporate. I called my water department and asked the engineer about it (when I was into making homebrew). He said that they only use chlorine gas because the pipelines were short from the treatment plant, but in large cities they have to use chloramine so it doesn't disperse before reaching the end user. I use my water straight out of the tap and don't worry about it.
 

Tetrahedral

Well-Known Member
I'm nowhere near a city but any decent water plant these days doesn't use the gas method anymore. Use to be a lot of softened water in cities here but maybe they have a better work around since city water has got a better taste over the years.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
I have always sat water out in a 1 gallon jug for 24 hrs or more but now that I have 10 gallon pots I need alot more water. So I bought 5 gallon jugs and a air stone/ 10 gal. Air pump. I was trying to figure out how long it takes to dechlorinate that amount of water while using the stone? Any help would be appreciated
I leave 5 gal buckets of water for 24hrs with air stones running in them. I would think that more surface area exposed to the air would decrease the time need to dechlorinate the water. So I don't know how jugs would compare to buckets.
 

buyyouabeer

Well-Known Member
Probably a couple of reasons for the gas method. One our water quality is outstanding here in the PNW and two we are also home to Intel's Ronler Acres fabs and they need a cubic assload of very pure water.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
Depends on what it is chlorinated with; if they use chloramine it will not evaporate. I called my water department and asked the engineer about it (when I was into making homebrew).
Your local city/town website probably has a link to the water board report on your drinking water. Worth doing some quick poking around on the web to find out what's in your water.
 

Shape Shifter

Well-Known Member
Use some potassium metabisulfite. Aka, Campden tablets. One small tablet treats 10-20 gallons. Neutralizes chlorine and chloramine in less than 5 minutes. Remember to grind the tablet into a powder.
 

jondamon

Well-Known Member
Personally I don’t let my water sit out to “dechlorinate”.

Most chlorine levels in tap water are pretty low around 4ppm.

2.5ppm of chlorine has been known to cause some phytotoxicity in some plant species but not cannabis.


One of the main reasons to “dechlorinate” your tap water is for those among us who are concerned with their microbe populations as Chlorine etc can kill off some of the micro herd.

But there is further evidence that the hit the micro herd sustains is back up to the same level it was by the next day.
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
I have always sat water out in a 1 gallon jug for 24 hrs or more but now that I have 10 gallon pots I need alot more water. So I bought 5 gallon jugs and a air stone/ 10 gal. Air pump. I was trying to figure out how long it takes to dechlorinate that amount of water while using the stone? Any help would be appreciated
If you are planning to use 2 part synthetic nutrients anyway then dechlorinating water is kind of a waste of time. Mostly all municipal water systems now use chloramine so you cannot even bubble it off.
Plants don’t care if there’s a little chlorine in the water but natural soil microbes do. It dries out their bodies over time rendering the soil basically sterile. If you plan to grow in organic living soil then consider using a different water source. I use water collected from a dehumidifier plus collect rain and even snow runoff if needed. Also have access to a natural spring if I need to.
 

Tetrahedral

Well-Known Member
To a single microbe tap water might be harsh, to a soil population there isn't enough to cause a problem because it's in low amounts. When tap water was modernized it had to be able to support plant growth not just human digestion. There will be stuff in all tap water that can be cultured and will then go on to make you very I'll even death but never gets a chance to multiply from single numbers because of that small amount of chlorine. If water pipes get population increase and the public get Ill then an extra amount of chlorine and stuff is flushed through the pipes and were all ordered to run our taps and not drink till it's flushed out. The extra amount is the amount needed to sterelize the microbes and can harm soil life and aggrivate humans if drunk but this hasn't happened here for a long time which probably coincides with the more stable chloramine system changeover a few years back. I tell you it's easier to create a stable even solution with salts over gasses and priced cheaper so win win I think.

Our water plants can only do so much and heavily rely on the water quality of resovoirs, a dirty resovoirs with lots of dead animals might overload the processing plant so the end quality isnt so good, we have experienced this scenario too and some lands from lead mining have to be heavily managed to stop leakage because it's easy to end up in the end water supply.

We have some amazing 98 percent coverage here for good tap water, there's always going to be a few dicks that live in outlying places where supplying water is impractical and too expensive fucking up the percentage. All the info is there online about plants fish and sensitive species along with a lab quality water report. Apart from the most extreme no one changes their pH or chlorine or quality to soil grow indoors and out, there's only one concern and that's hard water. In some places after a few months you will end up with soil caked in insoluble calcium and it's accompanying friends, I'm not sure what the cut off point is in ppm, 400/500 seems high but I don't know if better standards have seen a lot of the worst places get a better.

I've not heard of desalination plants but most is just runoff rain water over land and into resovoirs, blessed with lots of mountains and rain shortages are real rare. Some times I'd taste softened water, some sewage treatments might supply back clean water as a byproduct but usually people rave about there water and think we're pretty lucky in this country.

I have no reason to fuss my tap water, I like to think it's made for the exact purposes I intend, growing food, buds, drinking, cooking and washing. If I bought soil and it killed it I would claim compensation in court, if it killed my fish or sensitive species then I have no claim as it's covered in their information given to customers and I should have read the leaflets and website.

Chlorine and pH come up a lot, neither seem relevant to soil in much detail, the ionic balances will quickly breakdown and redistribute throughout a much more complex system that we cannot give gravity to. In a resovoirs I want to hold my ph to the left of the reaction so an acid or base can push it but that's an ionic solution and the acid and base increase ppm which soil will precieve differently. Any good hydro fertilizer will buffer already by a choice selection of ingredients. All this goes to shit in soil, it's now mixed with more ingredients which would make it complex to describe the end results on a single system like pH or chlorine, your fertilizer is going to have more influence than the combined ppm of water pH and chlorine.

I really just choose soil because it's meant to be easy, no bubbling water, no throwing acid in it, no meters, sold in every shop and tap all set for me to pot and pour.
 

Medskunk

Well-Known Member
I know this for a fact.. about 1gr of chloramine in the water needs about a week in the bubbles. Chlorine is easy.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
I know this for a fact.. about 1gr of chloramine in the water needs about a week in the bubbles. Chlorine is easy.
Chloramine doesn't dissipate over time like chlorine, it takes way longer. I would look for a multiple stage RO filter system to remove it, or find another water source if you want it gone.
 
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Medskunk

Well-Known Member
Chloramine doesn't dissipate over time like chlorine. It has to be chemically removed from your water.
It surely doesnt.. AS EASY AS the chlorine. It just takes much longer. I read this in a scientific thingy survey about it. My local water has around 0.8gr in the scale.
On my last grow i took this for granted, not everyone has to hehe
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
It surely doesnt.. AS EASY AS the chlorine. It just takes much longer. I read this in a scientific thingy survey about it. My local water has around 0.8gr in the scale.
On my last grow i took this for granted, not everyone has to hehe
I edited my post :wall:.
I wouldnt want to use water sitting out for a week though, even with airstones.
 
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