Diy co2 bag

noysy

Well-Known Member
Has anyone done it succesfully? Im on the hunt for a recipie. I dont want to spend my money on someones overpriced compost!
 

iStayMedicated

New Member
http://www.420magazine.com/forums/do-yourself/115134-diy-co2-generator.html this has good reviews, and yes they work, approx 200 ppm ea with this set up.

some more helpful info on determining amount of sugar and yeast.

Just some helpful info I came across on the topic.

A few things about this, I've just been doing a lot of research on this and there is some miss(ing) information. In the air outdoors, CO2 comprises about .038% of the total gas (380ppm). If you have a closet growspace with the door open and a fan running, this allows for gas to equalize so you will have ~380ppm. 380ppm is on the low end of the continuum of most plants ability to use it as fuel for photosynthesis (which stops completely at 200ppm), plants getting sufficient light grow much heavier and faster if supplied with 1500ppm (.15%, more than 4 times atmospheric levels). CO2 is only used in the presence of light and the amount of light available directly effects how much CO2 your plant can photosynthesize: at 4600fc a plant can use up to 600ppm CO2, if you increase the light to 5500fc it can use between 1200-1300ppm of CO2, if you go over 7500fc they can use up to 1500ppm.

To do calculations of how much CO2 will be generated:
1lb of CO2 (.45kg) = 8.7 cubic feet (.246 cubic m)
1cubic foot of gas increases the percentage of gas in a 1000 cubic foot room (10x10x10) by 1,000ppm
-during fermentation about half of the sugars weight is CO2, so if you want 1lb CO2, use 2lb sugar
-To determine how much weight you need, first figure out how much light you have and find the appropriate ppm CO2. Then find cubic area of growspace. Use these: 600ppm is 1:666(if you want 600ppm, multiply cubic area by .0006, so a 1000 cubic food room requires .6 cubic feet, or .0168 cubic meters or CO2) -- for 1000ppm it's 1:1000, so multiply area by .001 -- 1200 ppm is 1:1,000,000, multiply by .0012.

-When you make your hose, puncture it up and down the length of the hose (like for a drip irrigation system) and place it above your plants (CO2 sinks).
-if you want to use CO2 outdoors (which you should!!) a large compost pile in the middle of the garden works, or in a smaller garden putting a small compost pile under every plant. This is a super easy + effective way to enrich CO2 outdoors.

-CO2 generators are VERY effective under certain conditions and at least somewhat effective in nearly all conditions.

credit to spitinthacool
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
In the past I have wheeled my BBQ into the grow room

the propane does increase humidity levels

but with 5k of HPS running it soon dries out

max temp reached under 15 minutes

and steady at 31C/84F

But then I was told I needed the BBQ for a local party

and forgot to put it back in the GR ...Dah!
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
Everybody at some point tries to run up their CO2 levels one way or another. I did, my buddy who makes wine did (CO2 is a by product), another guy was making home brewed beer, etc.

But in a normal ventilated room with a quick air exchange, I tend to think the results are marginal. A commercial grower with a tank runs a closed, sealed room...gets CO2 up over a 1000 ppm, and then can run up his temps. up over 85° that makes the whole thing work. CO2 and higher temps together has an impact in a sealed environment.

I tried little home made generators, you really couldn't tell any difference...it was more of a 'feel good' thing...

That being said, if I order something shipped in dry ice...I throw it in a bucket and let it evap in the grow room...lol...I just don't think it does much.

But feel free to try...your ppm isn't likely to go up much. And letting it drop down onto plants can't work well with fans blowing around. I used to put the hoses behind a fan and let it blow onto the plants...they didn't seem to care one way or the other. I'm thinking you have to add a lot more to have an impact, and combine that with temp. run up.
 
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