stonedream
Member
what is the difference between the two? If i understood correctly bubbleponics is a DWC with added drip irrigation. Isn't that the same thing as a waterfarm?
Hello ......what is the difference between the two? If i understood correctly bubbleponics is a DWC with added drip irrigation. Isn't that the same thing as a waterfarm?
Unless i'm misinformed, saying drip ring is useless for bubbleponics sounds weird. Bubbleponics = DWC with a drip irrigation, without it its just a DWC, DWC = just an airstone in res, no irrigation, as you stated above.the drip ring is useless for bubbleponics if you want to call it something. young plants keep the water barely touching the net pot and you'll be all set. let the water level drop a bit as it grows older if you want or some people keep it high through out veg and lower it during flower.
So its all apples to oranges just got to see what works best for you.
I wouldn't spend the money on drip rings and you wouldn't need a whole new system to try them out. just integrate with your current set up and see if there are any improvements. Do this on a new grow and not in the middle of one.
Regardless of terminology, I agree that a drip ring is useless in any form of DWC. I've used it, turned it off on 4 of my 8 sites, and saw no root or foliage difference after a month. Disconnected the rest and haven't looked back. You already have the roots sitting in solution. What exactly do you hope to achieve with it?Unless i'm misinformed, saying drip ring is useless for bubbleponics sounds weird. Bubbleponics = DWC with a drip irrigation, without it its just a DWC, DWC = just an airstone in res, no irrigation, as you stated above
well, the water gets oxygenated when surface water comes into contact with air, a irrigation system allows your reservoir to come into contact with surface of hydroton and therefore you get more oxygen for the same air pump (no water pump used). But you've tried it and seen no difference, probably meaning you have a strong enough air pump anyways, maybe the secret to a water farm is a large pot with lots of hydroton that needs the irrigation to stay moist. yeah, kind of makes sense now that i think about it, more roots in hydroton means more oxygen which means faster growth, and the bottom roots do the real drinking...Regardless of terminology, I agree that a drip ring is useless in any form of DWC. I've used it, turned it off on 4 of my 8 sites, and saw no root or foliage difference after a month. Disconnected the rest and haven't looked back. You already have the roots sitting in solution. What exactly do you hope to achieve with it?
https://www.rollitup.org/grow-journals/458371-scottyballs-tribute-grow-pineapple-express-26.htmlHave you considered just adding more air to the res you currently use? I'm just not sure why you would want to replace water/rootspace with hydroton. More mess, cost, hassle, fungus/pest risk, and less rootspace. If you want to maximize oxygen availability to a plant, do one of 2 things: Aeroponics or large air pumps. Also, running a drip over a root as opposed to floating it in a solution will cause less root tips to form. If you know about root physiology, you know it's the tips we want. You can't force one section to only take in oxygen and the other to only take in nutrients, doesn't work like that.
I'm also not sure what you mean about waterfarm root masses, I've been more impressed by my DWC roots from the exact same room. Bigger plants=bigger roots. The best roots I've ever seen are from HPA or AA, THOSE are efficient root systems.
Hello...Still not seeing roots that would fill up a 5 gallon bucket, but get a waterfarm if they're so great.
Here is a dwc grow someone posted a couple weeks ago.
https://www.rollitup.org/dwc-bubbleponics/625868-latest-grow.html
Nice roots!Hello...
I use a drip ring, I always have...and my 5 gallon buckets fill up with roots..They may plug up near the end, some do and some don't, I will look for a pic of my root ball