I know! I don't think my filter is attached properly. Without the filter, water is 320ppm. I thought that a carbon filter drops the ppm (?) Definitely makes the water clear and taste better, no chlorine.i'd be more worried about waking up with some weird ailment, holy shit 310 ppm is high mine is only 45...
I am not sure, I use tap water with no filter right now. Maybe your filter is old or something?I know! I don't think my filter is attached properly. Without the filter, water is 320ppm. I thought that a carbon filter drops the ppm (?)
Reverse Osmosis removes ppm. Carbon only removes odors, chlorine. It's a "polishing" filter.I know! I don't think my filter is attached properly. Without the filter, water is 320ppm. I thought that a carbon filter drops the ppm (?) Definitely makes the water clear and taste better, no chlorine.
I recently started adding 1 part tap to 2 parts RO after reading one of your other posts -- bringing the ppms down to 140-160. It works great. No more calmag and no more ph'ing......puts my ph right at 6.4. Can't believe I had never thought of it myself.Reverse Osmosis removes ppm. Carbon only removes odors, chlorine. It's a "polishing" filter.
You can add about 50% RO water to your tap water to get it down to 160ppm which should be in the ideal range. You probably don't want to go too far over 200. The only problem I'm aware of is that higher ppm competes with the ppms you create with nutrients. Perhaps too much ca/mg.
The carbon filter may be beneficial for you drinking the water. But, you don't need to eliminate the tiny amount of sanitizer for your plant. There's so little present (for the closed water deliver system) that a small amount of organic material will exhaust it quickly. Add a pinch of sugar or spit in the water. It will be exhausted quickly. Or, give 1/8tsp molasses with each watering to promote microbial growth in the soil (to offset the minor impediment the sanitizer creates.). The bottom line is: if you use synthetic nutrients they're doing more harm to the soil biology than the tiny amount of chlorine.
(I assume you're soil. If you do hydro, you should probably use RO water and calmag. If you're in soil and use 160'ish ppm water you don't need calmag, assuming the soil has dolomite amended into it too. If your water's ppms are sufficiently high in ca/mg.).
Mine is 440! City water too, not from a well.i'd be more worried about waking up with some weird ailment, holy shit 310 ppm is high mine is only 45...
For sure.......and I'm pretty sure tap is federally limited to not exceed 500 ppm -- so both our municipalities are walking that line pretty closely.....yours especially. I thought mine was bad. LolHere is the interesting part. I read that with a PPM of 500 or above it's not advisable to drink. With 700 or above it's unsafe to drink.
WAH? RO has nothing in it,,,,,you add a buffering agent (Ca/Mg) and then you add your nutrient.......If you run hydro. It is , without a doubt , the best way to the biggest, fastest buds you will see.....period!I recently started adding 1 part tap to 2 parts RO after reading one of your other posts -- bringing the ppms down to 140-160. It works great. No more calmag and no more ph'ing......puts my ph right at 6.4. Can't believe I had never thought of it myself.
It depends really. If I'm running hydro, I'm using either aquaflakes or GH flora series. With aquaflakes, calmag was never necessary -- at all -- it has plenty of CaMg in it already. When I used Flora series, I would sometimes get deficiencies so I would add 5 ml a gallon to my RO before I mixed.WAH? RO has nothing in it,,,,,you add a buffering agent (Ca/Mg) and then you add your nutrient.......If you run hydro. It is , without a doubt , the best way to the biggest, fastest buds you will see.....period!
Adding back more ppms for what ever reason is like shooting yourself in the foot!!!!
You simply don't KNOW what is in those tap water ppms!
Welp, to each his own. My plants have never been healthier and I'm saving money by not having to buy calmag. Works for me. Plus, when I decide I'm bored of soil and ready to return to hydro, I still have my RO.Because your spending money on RO in the form of equipment and then rendering it moot by adding what you wanted to take out in the first place.....Why?
Ca/Mg is needed by the plant,,,,,It is used in RO as a buffer (what was removed with RO) in hydro many nutrients don't include the Ca/Mg because most folks add it back to BE the buffer......(The buffer helps control the pH) Now with some nutrients there IS added Ca/Mg in dose's that make it the buffer.......
The point in hydro OR soil is that you are adding ONLY the things required by the plant for growth.....ANY extra ppm takes space from that AND the plant has to deal with it.....
Sorry, but I like,,NO ,, LOVE to know exactly what is in my feeding and to manipulate in exact ways.....Nothing in my way!
In the US water providers are required by federal law to publish an annual water quality report. This gives some knowledge of what's in any individual's tap water, for the ca:mg ratio. (Ideal is in the 2:1 to 3:1 range. If the soil has a healthy amount of dolomite amended into it, that might not matter as much. Mine is 2:1 based upon my city's annual water quality report.).You simply don't KNOW what is in those tap water ppms!
I fill a 5-gal jug at the dispenser. I haul less often.Because your spending money on RO in the form of equipment and then rendering it moot by adding what you wanted to take out in the first place.....Why?
Annual,,,,it fluctuatesIn the US water providers are required by federal law to publish an annual water quality report. This gives some knowledge of what's in any individual's tap water,
Just a matter of perspective.
Good Luck to all!As long as its getting a decent amount of calmag you should be okay but just cause you get a ppm reading doesnt necessarily mean that its cal and mag in that water.
Good luck brotha!