Prawn Connery
Well-Known Member
It's very relevant if you actually read it. Do you see all those nutrient uptake charts? Nocturnal nutrient uptake is not that far behind diurnal uptake, while water uptake is far less, meaning your plants can actually handle a higher EC during the dark period as there is less transpiration.So how is this relevant? is no relation between the two. At night they barely take up water at all. So yes then they will relatively take up more nutrients than water with lights out, but that's a tiny amount to of their total nutrient intake. My plants drink 6 liters of water per m2 during the day and 500ml during the night. The drop in EC overnight is not easy to measure since it's so small.
Plants do take up more nutrients when they get a lot of light then when they get a bit of light. That's where the big difference is and it's easily quantifiable with a regular EC meter.
If you are measuring your EC after 12 hours dark during flowering and only seeing a very small drop compared to daytime consumption, then who am I to argue? Likewise if you are lowering EC after switching to 12/12 and seeing what you believe to be better results. But there are probably millions of indoor growers out there following the directions on their nutrient labels that have been formulated by nutrient companies over many years and still getting good results, so either you're an anomaly, or you're just way ahead of the curve. Or perhaps it doesn't make any difference . . .
Personally, I don't subscribe to the theory that 50% more light (18/6 vs 12/12) means 50% more nutrient uptake. But that's just me, and for reasons already outlined.
What I can tell you from experience is that I don't water during the dark, and that effectively raises the nutrient concentration in my pots as they dry out over a 15-hour period (3 hours before lights-off) until the next watering at lights-on.
There is a school of thought that you should water during the lights-off period, as the plants are still feeding, but my theory is less transpiration means less water uptake while there is still enough nutrient in the pot to feed the plants. It also gives the root zone a chance to air out a little. Continual watering during the dark will deliver more oxygen to the roots - as with any hydro system - but then most of that nutrient solution would get flushed out with each watering as the plant is not drinking as much and the nutrient concentration would subsequently be diluted.
This is obviously unique to run-to-waste, as recirculating hydro is continually running.
Again, in my experience (your mileage may vary), overnight drying seems to work best in run-to-waste. I've pretty much tried it all over the years.