Reservoir mold

bigunyun

Well-Known Member
I got my blumats set up and running and my plants look really healthy.

But I think I have a problem because the reservoir smells moldy. Is there something you do to keep mold from growing? I had added a low strength of Botanicare bloom at 750ppm.
Thanks so much for your help
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
I got my blumats set up and running and my plants look really healthy.

But I think I have a problem because the reservoir smells moldy. Is there something you do to keep mold from growing? I had added a low strength of Botanicare bloom at 750ppm.
Thanks so much for your help
UC Roots. Also are you running an air Stone in your reservoir because you're pretty much guaranteed to get bacterial/fungal/mold growth by pumping air into your reservoir
 

EvilScotsm@n

Well-Known Member
UC Roots. Also are you running an air Stone in your reservoir because you're pretty much guaranteed to get bacterial/fungal/mold growth by pumping air into your reservoir
Ehm...That's like one of the most wrong sentences I've ever read. Pumping air into the res is whàt keeps it fresh. Have you ever grown a hydro plant? You do realise most of us grow in nothing but water with shit loads of air pumped into it.
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
Ehm...That's like one of the most wrong sentences I've ever read. Pumping air into the res is whàt keeps it fresh. Have you ever grown a hydro plant? You do realise most of us grow in nothing but water with shit loads of air pumped into it.
No, keeping it circulating and keeping the temperatures down is what keep it fresh and at a higher dissolved oxygen level. Pumping air in through an air pump is taking the air from your room, pumpingbin whatever microbes could be floating in that room and adding them to the water creating a temporarily oxygenated reservoir that dissipates quickly thus creating an extremely helpful environment to grow mold, fungi and bacteria. If you want proper dissolved oxygen, you lower your reservoir temperatures. The lower the temp of the water the more dissolved oxygen is permanently in the water. Also by using an air pump you're taking the air from the room environment and pumping it into the reservoir, which as we stated before pumps any and all microbial entities into the reservoir and it also increases your temps since you're taking air at the temperature the compressor is in and passing it through the compressor, further increasing the temperature.
And to answer your question, yes, I've been successfully operating Undercurrent and RDWC systems for well over 10 years while helping well known companies develop their systems to make them not only more efficient, but easier to use for the end user. Always pump oxygen into each individual bucket where there is a plant with roots. NEVER use an air compressor to pump air into a reservoir. Hook it to a chiller, this keeping the water consistently moving, maintaining a consistent temperature and allowing for more dissolved oxygen by keeping your temps low. If you don't believe me about colder water holding more oxygen, go fill a gallon jug with water all the way to the brim, out a cap on it and place it in the freezer until it freezes solid. The reason thenjug explodes/splits is due to the excess dissolved oxygen/air levels on the water as the water cools. But please, continue telling me I have no clue what I'm doing.

If there's no roots in the container you DO NOT pump air into it
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
Anything above 70 degrees (I say 68 to keep it safe) provides a perfect breeding ground for unwanted bacteria to grow in your system without a sterilizing agent like hypochlorous acidd
 

EvilScotsm@n

Well-Known Member
Yeah I'm aware how water temps, dissolved oxygen etc works but you're saying that because there isn't a plant there it will magically turn it mouldy and it doesn't.
Otherwise it would turn it mouldy with a plant in it and you accept yourself that isn't the case.
Your right in that you get more o2 etc with a recirc. I grow nft so I'm familiar with that stuff but to say an airstone makes the res go mouldy. We'll I've been doing it for 4 years and never had an issue. Lost a crop to rot once but was purely down to laziness.
The airstones certainly never had anything to do with it.
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
Ehm...That's like one of the most wrong sentences I've ever read. Pumping air into the res is whàt keeps it fresh. Have you ever grown a hydro plant? You do realise most of us grow in nothing but water with shit loads of air pumped into it.
I do apologize for trying to help you with your problem. I promise it won't happen again
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
Yeah I'm aware how water temps, dissolved oxygen etc works but you're saying that because there isn't a plant there it will magically turn it mouldy and it doesn't.
Otherwise it would turn it mouldy with a plant in it and you accept yourself that isn't the case.
Your right in that you get more o2 etc with a recirc. I grow nft so I'm familiar with that stuff but to say an airstone makes the res go mouldy. We'll I've been doing it for 4 years and never had an issue. Lost a crop to rot once but was purely down to laziness.
The airstones certainly never had anything to do with it.
The airstone definitely benefits aerobic growth of bacteria since it dissipates almost immediately leaving whatever fun stuff you pumped in from your room environment to play in that reservoir. Say and believe what you want. It literally doesn't matter at all if you want to take my advice. I'll just leave you with this one final time. NEVER PUMP OXYGEN USING A COMPRESSOR INTO A RESERVOIR. If you want to increase DO through electrolysis plates I'm all for it, but pumping the oxygen through that compressor into your reservoir is your problem
 

bigunyun

Well-Known Member
UC Roots. Also are you running an air Stone in your reservoir because you're pretty much guaranteed to get bacterial/fungal/mold growth by pumping air into your reservoir
no no air stone... but there is a circulating water pump in there to keep nutes mixed
 

stalebiscuit

Well-Known Member
air stone, get a cheap air pump from petco, someaquarium tubing, a splitter, and 2 or 3 airstones and a flow control valve (costs 20 bucks for everything maybe). proper water agitation and lower temps seems to be the answer
 

detgreenthumb

Well-Known Member
no no air stone... but there is a circulating water pump in there to keep nutes mixed
I always keep those on a timer to keep temps down unless they're hooked to a chiller. What's the temp of the liquid in the reservoir? Also, is the reservoir completely light proof or to you have places light can penetrate ti the solution?
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
I'm not sure a moldy smell is a bad thing. if you are adding mycos then it's part of the territory.
 

bigunyun

Well-Known Member
I always keep those on a timer to keep temps down unless they're hooked to a chiller. What's the temp of the liquid in the reservoir? Also, is the reservoir completely light proof or to you have places light can penetrate ti the solution?
hmm it's in a translucent tupperware bin, so light gets thru yes... and the temp... maybe that's the problem... how to cool it tho?
 

bigunyun

Well-Known Member
and btw, i switched the nutes back to general Hydroponic and opened the lid on the res and put a fan blowing air and so far it's still clean
 
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