Hi all. Working on how to figure out what this means on the Hydroguard bottle. Specifically how to decifer this. 1.00x10^4 cfu's per ml. I realize this is talking about how much of the active ingredient is in there. I have raw Bacillus amyloliquefaciens at a concentration of 10 billion CFU per gram. How many grams or whatever unit of measure is correct of raw to equal the Hydroguard concentration? To make a liter of use-able liquid, what would I need of my raw ingredient? Hydroguard is usually applied at a rate of 2 ml per gallon. Be interested in something close to that. Sorry if i have asked the same thing 4 times want to be sure I am clear.
I see the exponent is 4, making it 10 to the power of 4, which is 10,000...I think. So would that mean its 10,000 cfu's per ml??
Thanks all.
Peace, negative.
Been working on this. So if I am right in my math above then i would need 10 million cfu's total for a liter of concentrate. My raw is 10 billion cfu's per gram. 1% of 10 billion is 100 million. So then 1/10th of 1% needed...seems off. Help.
I see the exponent is 4, making it 10 to the power of 4, which is 10,000...I think. So would that mean its 10,000 cfu's per ml??
Thanks all.
Peace, negative.
Been working on this. So if I am right in my math above then i would need 10 million cfu's total for a liter of concentrate. My raw is 10 billion cfu's per gram. 1% of 10 billion is 100 million. So then 1/10th of 1% needed...seems off. Help.
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