The Real Scoop on Co2

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
I think people are talking about turning off exhaust fans while burning co2.

YOu actually want to have your fans running full blast when burning co2. Mainly to distribute the co2 evenly around the room. I ahve me co2 controller on the opposite side of the room from where the burner is so it takes a little time for the co2 to "get over" to the burner so to speak. There is always a little overshoot. Meaning that when my controller hits 1500, the burner shuts off, but then co2 keeps climbing to around 1690 or so. This is called "overshoot: and it is a function of how high you have your burner set...(how fast it generates co2). You can compensate by turning your burner down or lowering the PPM shut off #.

You also want to make sure that air is suffuciently moving around the room to refresh the air on the surface of the leaves..

cool? cool.
 

treeharvest

Member
I seem to be missing part of the scoop lol.
I have legallyflyings tankless set up. Mad props to him by the way!!! I was using tanks and never having to fill one of those again is priceless!

My question is about the proper organic nute load with CO2 at 1300 ppm, temp 84, humidity @60.
Im having a recurring problem with fade at week 5 with my favorite10 weeker. I do not have this problem when running naturally aspirated lol.

Could any of you shed some light on nutrient use and CO2 enrichment.
 

oceangreen

Well-Known Member
i agree, great read..

BUT ONE THING..

Having a sealed room, will JACK your humidity levels at lights off...

In addition, you co2 levels at lightofff will be detrimental to your plants even if your genrator is timed to be off at night, becuase you plants a dissapating alot off co2.

SO you need a vent to be run at lights off, to regualte humidity, and co2 levels...

Semi seald is the way to go. Sealed during lgihts on, and vented during lgihts off.. having nice a carbon fitler/inline fan combo,,, and you are good to go...
 

BeaverHuntr

Well-Known Member
I've seen random replies/opinions, about turning fans off when running co2. My question is when running a burner, is it recommended to turn wall-mount fans off, as well as carbon filter/inline fan? (carbon filter just has inline fan on top of it blowing at the ceiling no ducting)

100% sealed room... no environment controller. So fans, ac, lights, carbon filter/inline, all are plugged into individual sockets and timers... which would make it pretty tedious to turn fans off.

or is it chill to just have the burner set up doing its thing turning on and off, while the rest of the room still operates.
I run a sealed room and you dont need to turn your fans off at all..My carbon scrubber stays running 24/7 on the floor. Co2 id heavier than air so it always sinks down to the floor. As long as you arent exhausting any air out your room ( air cooled hoods are fine as long as you make sure everything is tight and glass is secured properly )
 

BeaverHuntr

Well-Known Member
I seem to be missing part of the scoop lol.
I have legallyflyings tankless set up. Mad props to him by the way!!! I was using tanks and never having to fill one of those again is priceless!

My question is about the proper organic nute load with CO2 at 1300 ppm, temp 84, humidity @60.
Im having a recurring problem with fade at week 5 with my favorite10 weeker. I do not have this problem when running naturally aspirated lol.

Could any of you shed some light on nutrient use and CO2 enrichment.
Using co2 @ 1300-1500 PPM increases photosynthesis so your plant is eating a lot more. I was a hydro grower for several years before trying out organics and soil, on my first soil/organic run I noticed "the fading " a lot sooner than I did in hydro or with bottle nutes.
 

treeharvest

Member
Thanks!
Im using subs super soil and aact tea. Guess I just need to dial in my dirt for the CO2.

I have looked all over for info on nute use and CO2, and haven't came up with much other than hydro guys need to back off on there ec a bit.

How did you solve your early fade with organics?
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
Well my question would be 1300ppm of what? I always add a little more nitrogen at the first sign of fade. I also run full on veg nutes the first week after the flip. They are just gobbling shit up at that time. Week two is probably 70 flower 30 veg nutes. They plants just go ape shit with the co2 an higher temps.

I run a dehu 24/7 set to 65% humidity. The last two weeks I lower it to 40 but only get down to maybe 50. I also lower the temps to high 70's and run 600 ppm of co2.

Careful with the mixture of low humidity and strong nutes, you will! Burn your babies
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
i agree, great read..

BUT ONE THING..

Having a sealed room, will JACK your humidity levels at lights off...

In addition, you co2 levels at lightofff will be detrimental to your plants even if your genrator is timed to be off at night, becuase you plants a dissapating alot off co2.

SO you need a vent to be run at lights off, to regualte humidity, and co2 levels...

Semi seald is the way to go. Sealed during lgihts on, and vented during lgihts off.. having nice a carbon fitler/inline fan combo,,, and you are good to go...
Unless you have a dehumidifier in your sealed room.

And why is co2 levels at night bad for the plant? During lights off plants use oxygen and expell co2, but as far as I know elevated levels (no higher than regular levels during the day) won't harm the plants.

My co2 generator turns off at lights off. My dehumidifier keeps the humidity under control.
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
And why is co2 levels at night bad for the plant? During lights off plants use oxygen and expell co2, but as far as I know elevated levels (no higher than regular levels during the day) won't harm the plants.
Exactly what I thought. I think that some people don't realize the composition of air in terms of the actual levels of oxygen, nitrogen and co2. Plants only need a small fraction of the total amount of o2 in the air. In addition, if you are increasing photosynthesis and transpiration rates by supplementing co2 you are also going to increase the amount of o2 in the sealed room as this is a byproduct of those reactions.

This is the polite way of saying that venting your room at night is only necessary if your trying to induce more mold, fungus spores, and insects into your grow room.

My plants are quite happy with the door shut and the HEPA filter running.
 

BeaverHuntr

Well-Known Member
Thanks!
Im using subs super soil and aact tea. Guess I just need to dial in my dirt for the CO2.

I have looked all over for info on nute use and CO2, and haven't came up with much other than hydro guys need to back off on there ec a bit.

How did you solve your early fade with organics?
I havent got there yet lol. I was a hydro grower for about 5 years and just barely got into soil/organics so I've only had one harvest using super soil. Co2 enrichment is supposed to speed up your finishing time.
 

BeaverHuntr

Well-Known Member
Unless you have a dehumidifier in your sealed room.

And why is co2 levels at night bad for the plant? During lights off plants use oxygen and expell co2, but as far as I know elevated levels (no higher than regular levels during the day) won't harm the plants.

My co2 generator turns off at lights off. My dehumidifier keeps the humidity under control.
Co2 levels at night arent bad they just dont do anything, you are just wasting co2. The plant will not take in any co2 without the sun/ hps.
 

BeaverHuntr

Well-Known Member
Exactly what I thought. I think that some people don't realize the composition of air in terms of the actual levels of oxygen, nitrogen and co2. Plants only need a small fraction of the total amount of o2 in the air. In addition, if you are increasing photosynthesis and transpiration rates by supplementing co2 you are also going to increase the amount of o2 in the sealed room as this is a byproduct of those reactions.

This is the polite way of saying that venting your room at night is only necessary if your trying to induce more mold, fungus spores, and insects into your grow room.



My plants are quite happy with the door shut and the HEPA filter running.
Yeah I never exhaust my sealed room I live in Phoenix so it's so dry here my flower room is always 40%-45% humidity. Plants use co2 and HPS and make fresh oxygen , AC brings in new air when needed and the scrubber stays running on the floor 24/7 scrubbing what ever stale air is in the room.
 

treeharvest

Member
I havent got there yet lol. I was a hydro grower for about 5 years and just barely got into soil/organics so I've only had one harvest using super soil. Co2 enrichment is supposed to speed up your finishing time.
Lol ive been in ss for quite sometime, I reamend and reuse soil also and have great results.
I just also got my room dialed into the point I thought I was ready for CO2. But Im Half way done with my second run with CO2 and I can see that they burn threw the nitrogen in subs mix to soon. Even with my early fade it looks that im still above my norm avg though.
 

NavySEALsVet

Well-Known Member
Dry ice dry ice and dry ice I keep it old school like my father in the 80s and I get chunks of top shelf bud ill stick to the old school way thank you.
 

guy incognito

Well-Known Member
Co2 levels at night arent bad they just dont do anything, you are just wasting co2. The plant will not take in any co2 without the sun/ hps.
But if the co2 shuts off then you aren't wasting anymore than you would by venting it at lights off. It's just residual co2 that will be there when the lights come back on.
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
Flogging a dead horse, but yeah, co2 levels at night mean nothing. Co2 rises in a sealed room regardless as the plants produce co2 through respiration at night. My burner is slowly dying on me. First the water pressure disk went bad, then the gas valve was sticking, now the ignition system is not working...could just be the batteries
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
Well mine is like a year and a half old. The pressure disc was a "poor design" so the guy replaced it for free. Plus I was running water that was pretty hot already which he said was not good for it. The gas solenoid just needed to be wiped clean. (Even though it wasn't dirty.?). I'm going to try new batteries and see if that helps anything. They are pretty simple really they should last about 4 years or so. But you know how everything is made now..cheap as shit. Spent $1,000 on a front load washer and the door handle broke off lat week
 

tooteefrootee

Well-Known Member
Hey fellow growers, I've been pretty quiet lately just a growing and working. My journals are completed and spring and summer are probably going to me no time to start another journal. At any rate, there seems to be this recurring trend of post after post of how to use co2 so I thought I would purge my knowledge on the subject to help people decide if it right for them....

Advantages of co2: Faster growth, denser growth = more yield. Like big time more. the claims of 40-100% increase in yield are no joke.

Disadvantages: costs money, bottle can be a PIA, burners generate heat and humidity.

How it works: This is the important thing. Co2 is not a magical substance or bloom enhancer. Its a naturally occurring gas, depending on how close you live to a freeway :) co2 right now tends to hover around 350-400 PPM. Co2 allows you to take advantage of increases in a plant metabolism when conditions allow for higher metabolism. IF you don't have the conditions for higher metabolism, then your wasting your money. There are not a whole lot of things that a plant needs to grow and bloom. Light, heat, co2, water, and nutrients. Generally when the temperature increases, so does the plants metabolic rate (the speed at which the chemical processes that allow for plant function are happening) They are kind of like cold blooded animals really. When its too cold, they don't do much, when it is too hot, they shut down to conserve energy. well, plants don't really shut down, they do other stuff but this isn't a plant physiology post.

So, as the metabolic rate increases, so does the demand for light, co2, and water. When one of these parameters is not present in high enough amounts to sustain the metabolic rate, it becomes a limiting factor. That is, inadequate amounts of light, water, or co2 causes an end to the increase in the rate of photosynthesis, and often, stops photosythesis until levels are adequate enough. As the plants metabolic rate increases, the first limiting factor encountered is the presence of adequate levels of CO2 and THAT is why co2 works. In general, a PPM of 1500 or so (i the peak of flowering) is high enough to ensure that photosynthetic rates are maximized.

It is this mechanism that dictates you need to have control of PPM levels. If your co2 level is constantly fluctuating then the level of co2 is going to act like a limiting factor is your running the lights and temp to take advantage of it. If your plants are chugging along and then co2 levels drop, they are going to slow or stop until levels increase. This is not an ideal situation and causes stress on some level to the plant. The other side of the coin is that your runing a tank or burner without a ppm controller and PPM's go through the roof (3-4 thousand) and you kill your plants.

Is co2 right for me?
Given our understanding of metabolic rates, you have to ask yourself. Do I have enough light to use co2? and do I have a way to maintain higher temperatures? Lastly, is my room sufficiently sealed to use co2?

Light: your probably going to want in the area of 60 watts per sq. ft. of HID lighting before you think about co2. It more about par and lux at the canopy level but I would use thee above as a general guideline. I have 40 watts a sq.ft. but I have 3 600's on a rail that allows me to have the lights closer and the rail moves in a manner that the plants are always getting some light.

Heat: optimal temps when running co2 are 85-90 degrees. Yes, its warm. Yes, the plants are running full speed; but the is exactly the goal. You need to have a way to get the room in that temperature range and keep it there. An AC unit is the easiest way as its a set it and forget it deal which is nice. The other way is to have temperature controlled exhaust fans.

Sealed room: Obvios-fucking-lee if your room is constantly vented your throwing your co2 away and wasting money. Plants DO NOT NEED "fresh air" they are not international travelers stuck on a public bus in panama with people chain smoking in front of you, chickens screeching behind you, and a steady stream of dust pouring in the windows. They need co2 during the day and oxygen at night. period.

There are many ways to run a sealed room with AC hoods and odor control. My hood inlet is outside the flower room and exhausts outside. Therefore my hoods are a closed system. I used incense to ensure that the hoods were not leaking and pulling co2 out of the room. It is impossible for smell to be exhausted from the hoods..it is a closed system. I have a carbon filter just sitting in the corner scrubbing the air. no exhaust necessary. It actually works better that way.


Make it happen:
Ok, so you have that shit figured out, you know how to not kill a plant, and you have some extra cash around. How much cash? Its going to take about $800.

I'm not going to get into the stupid ass ways that some people "produce" co2. If your putting bowls of yeast in your grow room or using co2 buckets or whatever, that's all cool and the gang but that is not what this post is about. This is about spending the money, understanding the system, and doing it right.

Things you need: tank or burner, fuel supply, PPM controller. There are many a PPM controller on the market and none of them are cheap. You want an IR controller that monitors and reads out the exact PPM. They are going to run you around $400. I got my super pimp daddy CAP XGC-1 for $500 on CL. Two paths diverge in the forrest from here: bottles or burner.

If you have temperature control then GET A BURNER!! Yeah thee bottles are neat and clean and produce no heat but here is the dirty little secret, a bottle lasts about 5-6 days in a small room and they cost is the same as a burner.

For bottles you need: solonoid controlled valve (the CAP one!! b/c it doesn't freeze) $130, and a co2 tank - $160. So your at $290 for a bottle set up. Operating a bottle costs $17 a week plus the gas and time to run your ass to and fro to the welding gas store and having your neighbors hauling co2 tanks in and out and in and out and in and out. Trust me, it gets old really quick.

For a burner I use a cheap tank-less water heater ($150) and I tapped into the natural gas in my house-$65 pipe and fittings and use a $40 harbor freight sump pump to recirculate water from a 50 gallon barrel (free). The tankless set-up costs me around $15 a month in NG. If you have a gas line in your house I would HIGHLY suggest you use it. NG is dirt cheap compared to propane, you never have to fill a tank, and installing a gas line is not rocket science folks, just google it. You can visit my tankless thread for more info here: https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/410850-well-fuck-n-tankless-water.html If you want to buy a tankless water heater with a "hydro product" sticker on it, add another $300 to the cost. Me..I like to think of myself as a little smarter than that.

Ok, you have the shit installed.. now what?
Fisrt, smoke a blunt and get ready for some cool shit. Watching your PPM meter rise and fall is pretty damn coo stuff. Plus the plants really do go ape shit. I get 2-3" of growth per day during the stretch on indica/sativa hybrids.

ok, so the default PPM everyone throws around is 1500. Further research on my part uncovered that 1500 is needed during the peak growth phases (flower weeks 3-6) but not all the time. If you have a NG burner its so cheap not to just pump in 1500 then you might as well, can't hurt. If your on bottles then I found the following recommendations as the relate to plant age and metabolism so your not wasting money:

first couple veg weeks: 800-1000
Latter veg: 1000-1100
First couple flower weeks 1200-1300
Mid flower 1500 to 1800
Finish:...see bellow

There is some debate on using co2 in the last two weeks of flower. on one hand, the plants are producing allot of oils and putting on weight so you would think that co2 would be a good thing. However, co2 inhibits the production of ethyelene which promotes fruit maturation. There are several growers that knock down PPM to 400-500 in the final weeks. I know experienced growers who do it both ways. I have been switching strains every grow so really can't tell you definitively.

A couple of other general co2 usage notes:

Co2 is heavier than air and sinks to the floor. This isn't a huge issue but don't place your co2 sensor too high or too low and maintain good air circulation.

Don't mount your co2 sensor too close to your generator. You want the air and co2 to mix and get a good reading for the whole room. If it is too close, your readings will be higher than they actually are. Mine are mounted on the opposite sides of the room with a fan blowing the co2 towards the sensor.

When adjusting dispersal rates, try to balance between the burner being on for a long time (3-5 min) and burning for a short time and "overshooting" the desired PPM. (the ppm meter will sense 1500 and shut the burner off, but the Co2 will still rise as the co2 "gets too the meter".

It is important to have good circulation in the canopy. air movement right next to the leaf surface is very minimal. This is called the boundary layer and has to do with friction of the leave surface. If you don't have fans moving the air, the plant can deplete the amount of co2 present in this thin layer next to the leave so make sure their is air exchange going on. ... just don't overdo it.

Plants will transpire MUCH MORE in high heat and high metabolic environments. Therefore, they will use up much more water and raise the humidity more. compensate by running the dehumidifier more and you hydro folks may want to lower nutrient concentrations a little as the plants will be transporting more water and the nutrient salts that come with them.

Lastly, I can't overstate the need for a proper PPM controller. There are tables and charts to help you guestimate co2 usage but as those with PPM know, the rate of co2 usage is much faster than you would think and is subject to many many variables that just can't be calculated for. while it won't "hurt" to err on the side of not enough co2, I really advise you to just spend the cash and get a proper system. It eliminates waste and actually makes you money in the long run. (allot more).

Hope this has been helpful.
fellas, you can't get much better than this on a post, this is someone who doesn't screw around obviously and probably spent quite a bit of time to educate themselves completely on the subject, AND MOST IMPORTANTLY have the kindness to share it with us and spend more time to type out that wonderful tip for those of us who are about to enter co2 usage in our grow spaces.

legally flying that was a great educational post and i think it should be made into a sticky it was packed with great information, thanks for taking the time to do this post for us. I too am about to get into co2, i am not a novice grower by any means just want to go to the next level and your post was an awesome, one stop shop for me to have a good understanding of plant and metabolic reactions and they make all the sense in the world, the burner setup (you just saved me hundreds thank you), my room is already sealed and ready, thank you thank you! make this a sticky!
 
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