If the curl gets worse you know what to do.Do you think 1.4 is too high? This is two days post flip 50:50 veg:bloom.
I don't have a whole lot of substrate, tiny rockwool cubes and a couple of pebbles in the net pots.
If the curl gets worse you know what to do.Do you think 1.4 is too high? This is two days post flip 50:50 veg:bloom.
I don't have a whole lot of substrate, tiny rockwool cubes and a couple of pebbles in the net pots.
Hey at least mama was feelin' goodThalidomide...
Yeah from 18/6 to 12/12, same lamp.changes in lighting? seem to do that when they’re getting lighting adjustments
The pH down to 5.5 is too low, unless it's for hydro.The problem has gotten worse, more fingers, and is the same on plants that did not get the root treatment and the one that did. But it is only happening on the edge, furthest from the lamp, I believe it is caused by a lack of light (maybe a misbalance of nutrients and light). Not going to do anything as long as the plants directly under the lamp remain happy.
Hydro yes. Doesn't stay at 5.5 very long anyway, rises quick.The pH down to 5.5 is too low, unless it's for hydro.
What is the medium used?
No I don't think so. Or coldest for the tops, warmest for the roots. But I don't think there is a big difference.Is this the coldest part?
No, I'm using TA NovaMax which has both ammoniacal and nitrate nitrogen.Are they getting all their N is no3 ?
First time running this setup. It's a shared reservoir recirculating system. Seems unlikely that fungal or bacterial issues would be localized like this.I'm fishing for ideas, but think it might be a hygiene problem. Is this an established (and proven) method for you.
Did you see my last post in the brix thread this week
The far end of the light, the red and the blue hehe.Far end of the red, blue, or room lol
Do you still have the early leaves underneath looking okay? This looks like an outer leaf in the pics.
I'm fishing for why these parts might be more susceptible to a mold that's systemic. Perhaps it's the oldest of leaves, and has a good water flow to carry gunk there. Which would accumulate over time.
As an isolated leaf, whatever really. It's just the spread that I find concerning. It appears it could be some sort of cellular problem. Had you said just no3 I would of thought water excess. I have seen similar from reasonable use for calmag, but that kinda pools, rather than taking out extremities. Due to the no3 used in it's production, making the no3 too dominant in my feed. Over 95% I presume. But I'm off down memory lane here.
Might need some more pics, to see just how localised the issue is. That is likely key here. I need to understand air movement in the room and such, to really think about the possibilities. It certainly sounds wet though, and permanently wet systems often get a bit warm and/or rotten. The answer may be calcium chloride iirc. Pool shock.
The probem is that the pH drifts upwards, or there is something wrong with the pH meter.Hydro yes. Doesn't stay at 5.5 very long anyway, rises quick.
Is it a problem? I'm using tap water which has a pH of 7.5. I take the nutrient solution down to about 5.5 when I mix it up. The nutrients do reduce the pH but not that much, so I also use pH-. Then it as it rises close to 6.5, which I assumed was caused by nutrients and water being used up, I use some pH- again to take it down to about 5.5. I'm at 6.1 now after adjusting a couple of days ago.The probem is that the pH drifts upwards, or there is something wrong with the pH meter.
Most nutrients are acidic, so that's not it.
- What kind of water are you using? Is it filtered?
- Do you use growrocks, which buffer to 7.0 pH?
Is it a problem? I'm using tap water which has a pH of 7.5. I take the nutrient solution down to about 5.5 when I mix it up. The nutrients do reduce the pH but not that much, so I also use pH-. Then it as it rises close to 6.5, which I assumed was caused by nutrients and water being used up, I use some pH- again to take it down to about 5.5. I'm at 6.1 now after adjusting a couple of days ago.
I'm using Hydrocorn XL in the netpots.
I found out that with hydro to everything be perfect you need RO water to start with.The far end of the light, the red and the blue hehe.
View attachment 18998696
I think it's fine, not really spreading anymore.
I don't have pool shock but will run some FlashClean before the next rez change.
You should filter the water, then re-mineralize it, for instance with magnesium lime.Is it a problem? I'm using tap water which has a pH of 7.5.
Hydrocorn should also always be put in water for at least a day or so, to flush out lime and hydrate them.I'm using Hydrocorn XL in the netpots.
Yeah I did mess up not soaking the Hydrocorn long enough, only for some hours, but that was weeks ago I think they've been flushed and hydrated to the point that it wouldn't make any kind of difference anymore.You should filter the water, then re-mineralize it, for instance with magnesium lime.
It isn't just the pH, it's the buffering capacity, which is why the pH keeps rising. The extra calcium and likely the also alkaline chloride and choramide need to be removed. Water companies usually put more of it in the water in spring/summer, when temperatures rise and microbial activity increases.
Or at least put the water near the plants at room temperature for at least a day before using it. Much of the chloride will evaporate.
Hydrocorn should also always be put in water for at least a day or so, to flush out lime and hydrate them.