wyteberrywidow
Global
reading ur stuff i want to get hydro soil is out
OK, good plan so far, but I think you should opt for a flood system for watering. As I've said before:i got the 400 watt already and i got a hundred to spend now. i got floro shop lights 2 40 watt tubes warm red and cool white for the seedlings now and when they get big enuff ill put the 400 on them i got a job and bills so i limit to how much money i spend a week but i have alot oscill fans around in the house and i could afford to get a sec hid next tues like a mh or another hps prob a 250 tho
Aside from being easy to set up and operate, tray-based flood systems are very inexpensive and allow flexibility in plant count and placement, as opposed to bucket based eg WaterFarm or other systems with a fixed number of sites for plants.New growers are best served by plants in pots of absorbent media like rockwool, Fytocell or perlite, watered by a flood system.
Floods are dead simple to set up and operate. Nothing to clog, one moving part, very little plumbing. Floods are much more forgiving of watering failure than any other method. If plants are in pots of absorbent media, there's enough water stored in the media to get the plants safely through a pump or timer failure for a day or so if you forget to look in on the system. Also, if anything leaks in a flood system, with the reservoir being below the tray, the leak is most likely to drip into the res tank.
I would not recommend DWC or aero for a first time grower. DWC in particular has an Achilles' heel. Since DWC keeps roots submerged, they rely on 24/7 airflow. A pump or power failure lasting more than a few hours can kill every plant in a DWC op if you don't have a spare air pump or backup AC power to run the air pump.
Advanced growers may prefer aero or DWC because they are able to get more oxygen to the roots than floods with plants in pots of absorbent media, but the production difference is fractional. Clay pellet media can also be used, which due to low absorbency and large air gaps between pellets, tolerates very frequent watering, thus approximating the performance of aero or DWC. Pellets don't hold much reserve water, but are more tolerant of pump/power failures than aero or DWC.
New growers need simplicity and they don't get any simpler than a flood system. Advanced growers will appreciate the portability of plants in pots. They can be picked up and moved around for maintenance or to put slow plants in better light positions.
All good fitzy, thanks for that. I've added a couple of details just for clarity.50w average of HPS lighting a square foot,
4 plants a square foot in the flowering area,
a 400w hps footprint could do a:
3' x 3' = 36 plants
3' x 2.5' = 30 plants
You could; I don't pack them in quite that tight in my op (I have 2.6 plants sq ft, 23 per 900mm x 900mm tray), but it's doable- you have to be aggressive with your pruning of branching on the lower part of the plants.so i could do 30 plants in 3x2.5 closet sog and be happy
Sounds good so far.well i started germinating 2day, 2 diff strains. white widow and purps and cant wait to see how this goes i fig once they sprout ill put the shop on them 24/7 for about 1-2 weeks depending on how they look then ill use the 400 watt to veg or ill just get some cfls 2 add 2 the shoplight any advice????
I don't think I'd let roots unsupported by media get more than an inch long or so before transplanting them into media, whatever the watering system. The risk of breakage is higher when they're longer, which if you break a large taproot, will cause transplant shock and set development back significantly- or worse.Howdy Al & others, How big/much of a root system do i need to transfer clones from a bubble cloner to a hempy bucket? I know u dont care for hempys so if u dont know then thats kool.
Thanks for responding so fast. I cant speak for others but, when i recently removed plants from my buckets. There was no roots in the bottom 2" of the 3 gal bucket. Obviously thats the resivour. I thought that was kinda strange but yet understandable in another way. thxI don't think I'd let roots unsupported by media get more than an inch long or so before transplanting them into media, whatever the watering system. The risk of breakage is higher when they're longer, which if you break a large taproot, will cause transplant shock and set development back significantly- or worse.
You've obviously seen my concerns about keeping roots submerged without added oxygenation. Use of 50% grade H2O2 @ 1ml/L of watering solution every 3-4 days will reduce the risk of root rot in the Hempy system. You might also see about getting a 55 gallon drum of Luck for use with the Hempy- I'm not sure you can make them work without quite a lot of it.
Roots won't thrive where there's too much water and too little air. There were no roots formed in the part of the medium which is kept too wet. This is the main drawback of the Hempy.Thanks for responding so fast. I cant speak for others but, when i recently removed plants from my buckets. There was no roots in the bottom 2" of the 3 gal bucket. Obviously thats the resivour. I thought that was kinda strange but yet understandable in another way. thx
Heh, when I wrote the lead post in the https://www.rollitup.org/hydroponics-aeroponics/6592-get-harvest-every-2-weeks.html thread, I misstated the size of the trays (and I can't edit that post). I am not generally accustomed to estimating using imperial measures and did so without checking. The trays are not 4'x4', rather 900mm x 900mm (about 2.7' or 2'8"something). They LOOKED like 4'x'4'!I was wondering what size container you prefer and why. I thought I read you use about a 6.5 by W x 6.5" H. Couldnt you fit about 60 of these in a 4 x 4 tray?
There's only so much rootmass space that plants in a SoG op will need. The plants don't get very large. They'll need about 2L of volume at minimum (140mm x 140mm pots). My flowering plants don't get anywhere near rootbound in 175mm x 175mm (4L volume) pots, but very old mother plants (more than 8-12 wks old) can get pretty packed in- that's one of the reasons to replace them frequently.What if you used larger containers? would it help the roots being supported by a larger area of media?
Momentary lapse of reason? Only pots of that size available? Pot maker had a bunch of white ones to get rid of?why would they sell white containers.