Chlorine evaporates within 24 hours...why do you suggest using RO water?
.
But many places use Cholramine now.
That takes longer to evaporate.
RO water is like using a clean slate, the downside is if your nutes lack something so will your solution.
Chlorine evaporates within 24 hours...why do you suggest using RO water?
.
The water here doesn't even register on my blulab meter, so I'm not worried about it. Whatever it is, is less than 100ppm. I think around 45 from what I have heard.
i as well am having the same yellowing, but i think mine is from underfeeding, i decided to up my EC to 2.4
hey lazy...my well water comes in worse than yours...how well is your r/o unit dealing with such high ppm??? thinkin of gettin one but i dont wanna have to replace filters everyweek
I'll give you one guessRR- did you make that diagram just for me? Where do you insert the batteries?
ive seen many peeps with this problem including myself ive come to the conclusion it is a cal mag Def ive had the exact same thing and it wasant from over or under feeding they look like there lacking N but i know mine werent... mine was cal-mag def and hot spots from my lights, my bro tells me the hot spot diffusers work preety good on certain shades
RR- did you make that diagram just for me? Where do you insert the batteries?
I'll give you one guess
OK, I use a Tallboy as a prefilter, then a GE Merlin for RO, it comes in at 580 or so and out at 70-80ppm. GE actually recommends a water softener be employed in concentrations about 400PPM (or thereabouts) as it's easier for the filter to remove sodium from the softener than the minerals sodium removes. They tell me my membrane should last 1.5-2 years at 150gpd, but the prefilters should be changed annually at my usage. Your mileage may vary!