Lots of good replies and info, thanks everyone! The entire basement is about 2,000 sqft, with the grow room being about 450 sqft. I can leave the door to the grow room open about 95% of the time, which I'm hoping will take care of any humidity issues, with the AC being pumped into the room with central air, and the passive air leaking out of the open door. The only time I would have to keep the door to the grow room closed is when I have family visiting, which is only maybe 2 weeks a year, or so - I could possibly even just work around these visits to not be growing at these times, but I wanted to do a sea of green type setup, so we'll see.
This will depend on your A/C. Most A/C unites circulate the air in the room and do not pull from outside.
I have central AC throughout the entire house, there's no window AC unit. Does this make a difference? I assume a central AC system pulls fresh air from outside to have fresh air inside the house at all times, but this isn't my field of expertise, haha.
One of the main reasons for venting is to exchange the air. The plants use the c02 thats in the air and breathe out oxygen. The thinking is that if it is a closed environment with a lot of plants they might use up all the c02 in the air and be left without enough to grow well. People that dont vent usually supplement c02 with a tank or a gas burner.
While I was hoping to not have to vent to another room or outside directly, the room is not a closed environment, except for the tents. AC will be pumped in and air will leak out of the room via the open door. How does this effect co2 in this situation, should it be fine? I'm planning on having 20 plants in flower at one time (5 plants in each of the 4 stages of the sea of green setup I'm planning on adopting), in addition to a few mothers and a bunch of clones. Compared to some of the setups I've seen on this forum in even MUCH smaller spaces makes me think my setup will be very small in comparison. With that amount of plants, should I be good on co2?
Bustin,
But let me add some details to my previous post describing my MH grow room. The basic room was spit in two...far end being bloom room. I had passive "darkroom vents" for air into bloom room and a 256cfm fan through carbon scrubber to exhaust bloom room into veg room..
The veg room also had a 256cfm fan through scrubber exhausting to the living quarters and also had passive vents for intake air.
The whole shabang also relied on the fact that I opened the doors several times a day and the living area also get fresh air from door opening and such.
I am assuming your grow space won't occupy the whole room but will be built inside of that large room...correctomundo?
JD
What are "darkroom vents", can you explain more on that? The door to the large room where my tents will be will be open 95% of the time, so similar to yours. The rest of the house will get fresh air from door openings (although not very frequent, maybe 1-4 times a day), as well as from the central AC pulling in fresh air, if I'm correct in thinking that it does that.
And that's correct, I'm thinking of using a gorilla grow tent, about 5' x 5' for the 4 flowering phases of a sea of green setup (20 plants total). Then I'll have a smaller tent to house the mothers and clones. So my actual growing area will be drastically smaller than the room that has the tents in it.
The main factor will be co2/fresh air as other folk have already said
i guess it could be all worked out if you get all the variables
and know how much co2 a certain amount of plants will use roughly
compared to the amount of cubic air space you have
if you only grew 1 plant with 1 light in a very large closed space of course it would be fine, but as you build up the numbers it will reach a point where
they will suffocate
peace
I'm planning on having 20 plants in flower, 2-3 mothers, and then a bunch of clones. Should that be fine with the given space, for co2 and fresh air?
Hey Shamrock i have to chime in here... I respect all the other opinions here highly but I strongly suggest you reconsider your setup. I like it all except for the no venting outside part. lol. I am just concerned that you will have issues down the road with exactly those things... smell, humidity, temps, etc.
In the basement too right? Have you ever heard of the stack effect? its the way a lot of homes breath (especially in the Northeast). No time for a lecture here but you could change the way the house breaths.
I dont think you will get the control you want doing it like this but if you add a lung room (breather room?) then you will be much better protected. I would do it with the lung room but otherwise you will just be exchanging the air in the tents so much that the room environment will not be much different than the tent environment(humidity, temp, smell, etc.)The air in the basement generally ends up traveling through the entire house(stack effect). Take care friend. Dont rely on carbon filters too much! You may be disappointed.
Hmm, I will have to look more into this, didn't even think about anything like this at all. But as far as carbon filters, I don't know of another way to control smell - maybe ozone or ona gel? I'm not really familiar with either of those, but maybe I should look into them? Does everyone else agree that I shouldn't rely on carbon filters too much for smell? I was planning to rely SOLELY on them, by just buying larger ones than I needed, sort of an overkill effect.
Shamrock,
Question...your reason for not wanting an outside vent, Stealth? Neighbors nearby?
I don't know what Dodad is talking about, but his advice is internally inconsistent. He wants you to vent outside but also to not trust carbon filters? Seems that puts you in a bit of a bind! lol
JD
Both reasons are valid for me. For some reason, I just feel safer having the entire grow confined to the interior of my house. Venting outside would make me very paranoid. In addition to that, it's a brand new home being built, and I don't want to cut holes in it right off the bat - not to mention I'm not handy with things like that and I can't exactly hire someone to do it, lol. So it's just all around easier to not have to vent anywhere, if it's not necessary.