CO2 versus ventillation

nongreenthumb

Well-Known Member
Ozone is not harmfull as long as you dont look into the light as this will more than certainly cause blindness, ozone can harm the plant if used incorrectly as it can burn the leaves.

Ionizers send negative ions into the air which apparently cling on to the particles in the air which is supposed to clean the smell, but it can mean that the buds dont smell.
 

Pepe Lapiu

Active Member
Ozone is not harmfull as long as you dont look into the light as this will more than certainly cause blindness, ozone can harm the plant if used incorrectly as it can burn the leaves.
Ozone CAN create some respiratory damage.
I'll see if i can find an article on the subject.

But anyway, I've always prefered the good ol' can filter.

As for ionizers, they release negative ions which react with particles in the air and make them drop to the floor. If your buds were small enough to react with a (-)ion, then it won't smell. But i'd be very surprised to imagine a bud grown around a ionizer would loose it's smell.

With an ionizer, your grow room air will smell fresh, much like after an electric storm
 

Pepe Lapiu

Active Member
Dangers of ozone in your grow:
BBC NEWS | Health | Simple test for ozone lung damage
The Lung Association: Ontario: Research Report: Ozone and Human Health
Having shown that ozone can be very bad for your lungs, you still can use ozonators. Only you can't over-do it. But franckly, there are more effective ways to elliminate the odor and ozone can be smelly too.

I go to this guy's house and I know he's got a grow in there because the place reaks of ozone in the backyard when we sit at the patio.
The smell isn't as strong as weed of course but it is there.

Stay away from ozone, it can be dangerous, it is a polluant and it doesn't smell good. A good old fashion can filter will do you perfectly.
Even if you have a sealed room, you still need to move that air around, right? Well, while you are moving that air around, might as well pass it through a filter while you're at it ... right?

I use an ionizer in the rest of the house because it makes the air feel fresh and crisp but I think you'd need too many of them in a grow to make them worthwhile.
 

Pepe Lapiu

Active Member
Ozone Fact Sheet - American Lung Association site
Ozone Fact Sheet

[FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]Ozone (O3) is a highly reactive gas that is a form of oxygen. It results primarily from the action of sunlight on hydrocarbon vapors and nitrogen oxides emitted in fuel combustion.1 Ozone reacts chemically (“oxidizes”) with internal body tissues that it comes in contact with, such as those in the lung. It also reacts with other materials such as rubber compounds, breaking them down.[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]Ozone acts as a powerful respiratory irritant at the levels frequently found in most of the nation's urban areas during summer months. Ozone exposure may lead to:[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]premature death2[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]shortness of breath[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]chest pain when inhaling deeply[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]wheezing and coughing3[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]Long-term, repeated exposure to high levels of ozone may also lead to reductions in lung function, inflammation of the lung lining and increased respiratory discomfort.4[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]Exposure to elevated levels of ozone greatly increases the risk of asthma attacks, need for medical treatment and for hospitalization in persons with asthma.5[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates one out of every three people in the United States is at a higher risk of experiencing problems from ground-level ozone.6 Five groups of people are at particular risk:[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]people with pre-existing respiratory disease; those already afflicted with lung disease such as asthma, chronic bronchitis and emphysema7[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]senior citizens8[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]people who work or exercise outdoors9[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]children, because their airways are smaller, their respiratory defenses are not fully formed, and their higher breathing rates increase their exposure10[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]“responders”—otherwise healthy individuals who experience health effects at lower levels of exposure than the average person.[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]Ozone levels typically rise between May and October when higher temperatures, an increased amount of sunlight, and stagnant atmospheric conditions promote transformation of air pollutants into ozone.[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]For almost two decades prior to 1997, the federal air quality standard for ozone had been 0.12 parts per million (ppm) averaged over one hour, but tests carried out on healthy adults and children undergoing moderate exercise while exposed to lower levels of ozone showed a decrease in subjects’ breathing ability.11[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]In response to a lawsuit filed by the American Lung Association, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in July 1997 set a more protective ozone standard of 0.08 ppm averaged over an eight-hour period. Compliance is based on the fourth highest reading per year averaged over three years.12[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]The national ozone standard is under review currently, the result of yet another American Lung Association legal action. EPA had not formally reviewed scientific research on ozone since 1996, although the Clean Air Act requires such reviews every five years. The American Lung Association took legal action in December 2002, to require the Agency to schedule a formal review. In a settlement, EPA agreed to complete that review by December 2007.[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]To reduce ozone air pollution, the American Lung Association supports stringent controls on motor vehicles and commercial and industrial sources of the hydrocarbon compounds and nitrogen oxide emissions. These controls include:[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]stricter pollution control requirements for power plants, including those that will bring older power plants up to current emissions standards[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]stronger pollution control requirements for new motor vehicles and small engines[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]cleaner fuel standards, including diesel[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]cleaner diesel vehicles, especially heavy equipment and other diesel engines[/FONT]
    • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]improved in-use performance of existing pollution control equipment[/FONT]
  • [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]The ground-level ozone in the lower atmosphere (troposphere) should not be confused with the natural protective layer of ozone in the upper atmosphere (stratosphere). Although both are made of the same molecules (ozone), the ozone in the upper atmosphere protects us from the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays, while the ozone in the lower atmosphere harms us.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]For more information, call the American Lung Association at 1-800-LUNG-USA (1-800-586-4872), or visit our web site at [FONT=Verdana, Helvetica]http://www.lungusa.org[/FONT].

edit: an other characteristic of ozne is that it kills bacteria in your grow room. It might sound good but it won't kill just the harmful bacteria, it will kill the beneficial bacteria as well.
[/FONT]
 
what about recycling the air
i.e pumping the air throug 10' - 20' of duckting coiled up in a fridge or an air conditioned room and then back into your grow room
....of cource thats for a smaller grow room
 

fatman7574

New Member
Ventilation is an old schoolethod of maintaining the temperature of the romm at levels low enough to have the palny ts CO2 needs met by the 300 to 400 ppm found in typical air. While this is fine as long as the lighting is not at a high PAR it is inadequate for ya HID lighting at 50 to 70 plus watts per square foot which is becoming the norm for fast grows such as SOG's etc. If the lighting is as mentioned then CO2 is lacking even with constant ventialtion therefore you are just wasting a large portion of the light your providing.

Now consider CO2. To best utilize CO2 a closed sytem is most efficient. Using CO2 and using a closed room will cause excessive humidity, therefore an airconditioner can dehumidify while it is keeping the room th emperature below 90 degrees. I repeat an air conditioner dehumidifies. Some might be alarmed by this but cosnsider with high temps and plentiful CO2 , plentiful nutrients and water a plants will transpire very heavily if the humidity is kept at around 40%. All these things together mean very fast growth as tranpiration is how plants take up nutrients and high lighting and CO2 means lots of photosytheis. Put these things together in one room at the same time and you have very, very fast growth. However it is not a forgiving system as it is like a sytem on methamphetamine. If you remove one of those needs, such as dehumifictaion or heat control or water the plants can fry in one day easily. About the only thing that is tolerable in such a sytem is if the lights go out.

The reason some people st ay a DWC needs more ventilation can be because if the lighting is also good a shortage of CO2 will become apparent and the humidity will also become excessive do to all the evaporating water experienced by many DWC systems. If the humidity is excessive then transpiration slows or neraly srtops entirely. No transpiration or respiration no growth.

In a closed system to control the odor that can happen when the door is open you only need to use a small carbon can or some such carbon filtration in the closed room. You should never have a need to ventilate a closed (sealed) room grow. As for the airconditioning. If you use air cooled tubes on your lights you might find the airconditioner will not need to run too much. If this the case you might actually need a dehumidifier. However, it is usually never necessary to have a humidifier in a sealed grow unless your growing in a very hot area where the air conditioner runs almost constantly. A 12000 btu air conditioner can easily remove 60 to 70 pints of water per day. I find the easiest grow room to maintain is a sealed system with very heavy insulation. My grow rooms are surrounded with 5.5 inches of foam insulation and the doors are foam core insulated and weather stripped. I have reef aquriums so I use water cooled lights. HID lighting is 85% wavelengths that produce heat. So for ever 1000 watts of lighting that goes into the room approximattely 850 watts need to be removed. Good water chiilers are more efficient than good air conditoners.
 

CLOSETGROWTH

Well-Known Member
Ventilation is not just to get rid of bad air in the grow room—keeping the air moving is essential for plants that have complicated respiration processes involving not just CO2 but oxygen and water.

Ventilation is also used to keep the heat down, especially considering the increased heat put out by a CO2 generator. I presume you’re burning propane in order to make CO2.

A cooler method (but also more expensive) is to buy compressed, bottled CO2 and have it released by a timer.

Your postings have yet to touch upon the topic that seems to be concerning everyone these days—carbon emissions.

If you generate CO2 and allow a lot of it to escape via a venting system or cracks under the door or other openings in your grow room, you are actually contributing to global warming.

It is estimated that normal air contains about 300 parts-per-million (ppm) of CO2. Advanced Nutrients Medical, my cannabis specific company of choice, advises to generate as much CO2 as the strength of your nutrient solution.

When generating CO2 your plants require considerably more food than without this additive. So let’s say your solution contains 1,500 ppm of nutrients, then you should be generating 1,500 ppm of CO2 in the room.

If you stop generating this gas, it takes about three hours for the air to go from 1,500 ppm of CO2 back to the 300 ppm CO2 level.

The best solution is to have a totally closed room with A/C to keep the air at the desired temperature (around 75º F). Then you’re not contributing to global warming.

If you adjust your timers to stop venting to the outside while CO2 generation is going on, then you’ll minimize your emissions to the outside.

CO2 does help produce higher yields, but it’s not the only factor. Using cannabis specific base nutrients such as Sensi Grow A & B and Sensi Bloom A & B, along with all the root colonizers and supplements that Advanced Nutrients Medical manufactures, has provided me with huge buds and abundant harvests for a number of years now.

Even though I’ve cut back on my CO2 use, in order to be a better global citizen.

Oh Brother, another tree hugger, and he uses AN nutes..Mannn.

I better start washing my underwear with apple peels eh?? :roll:
 
i was thinking about this myself.... My main question is why do you vent a room ??? i thought it was to remove heat mainly!! With that being said what if you have a A/C, De-humidifier, circulating fan and add CO2 in a airtight growroom. You wouldnt need to vent more than twice a day if that much. Because you would have created a perfect enclosed environment. That just my take on the situation.... Purple i think you might be good with vent twice a day if you have a A/C for heat control hence saving alot of CO2... I'm a noob so listen to the pro's just trying to think logical...i
in a sealed room with AC, Dehumid, etc. you do not ever need to ventilate the room, the only ventilation my room gets is when i open the door. the plants make O2, the generator makes CO2, and the AC and Dehumid takes care of the rest, its that simple!
 
Nongreenthumb, can you please explain to me how an air conditioner RAISES humidity? I could swear i have a hose connected to mine that constantly drains water to the outside. Seems to me its removing it from the air, hmmm. Warm air holds water, cold air holds less. Air conditioners remove water from the air, just like a cold glass of pepsi, water condensates on the glass, the same thing happens to the cold coil in the AC, the condensate drips out of the back or into the hose as in my case., no wonder people in these threads ask dumb questions all the time, look at this advice you give, cmon man, give people answers, not headaches.
 
Ozone is not harmfull as long as you dont look into the light as this will more than certainly cause blindness, ozone can harm the plant if used incorrectly as it can burn the leaves.

Ionizers send negative ions into the air which apparently cling on to the particles in the air which is supposed to clean the smell, but it can mean that the buds dont smell.
Seriously, you are an IDIOT! You are going to get someone hurt! Ozone is the strongest natural oxidizer there is, way stronger then bleach! IT WILL LITERALLY EAT THE TISSUE IN YOUR LUNGS, IT IS NOT SAFE TO BREATH, HAVE YOU EVER FELT IT BURN YOUR EYES? MAYBE YOU SHOULD GOOGLE THING BEFORE YOU GIVE RETARDED ANSWERS TO PEOPLE. OZONE IS SAFE IN VERY VERY SMALL CONSENTRATIONS, IF YOU CAN SMELL IT ITS CAUSING DAMAGE TO YOUR LUNGS, THIS IS NOT JUST MY OPINION, IT IS SCIENTIFIC FACT, GOOGLE IT MR NONBRAININYOURHEAD
 

fatman7574

New Member
With a reservoir within the room the water will alwys be taking on CO2 and therefore creating carbonic acids. Carbonic acids immediattely turn to a carbonate ion which at low pH's (we have low pH's i.e 5.5 to 6.0) which then turn to bicarbonate ions which then form Calcium Bicarbonate and/or Magnesium Bicarbonate. This means deficiencys and Ph problems. The way to avoid this is called a degassing column. Picture a 4' or 6" diameter pipe filled with bioballs. Air flow up through the pipe from top to bottom. Water trickles down over all the bio balls. It gives up the CO2 and takes on Oxygen asi it is in cotact with all the a ir going up the tube. This can be made more efficiently by blowair up the tube to incraese the gas exchange. Thw water is pumped from the resrvoir to the top of the tube(s) and flows out of the bottom where it is caught in another reeservoir (no air pump) or directly drained from the pipe bottom back to the resrvoir if using a air pump that blows air up the tube. Just use a Y adapter to direct the air flow upward. If yur interested Ican draw a few drawings. It will assure that your CO2 level in the water is below that allowed by your waters alakalinity. IE it will stop pH changes due to carbonic acid formation. It will also assure full DO saturation or even some over saturation.
 

fatman7574

New Member
Nongreenthumb, can you please explain to me how an air conditioner RAISES humidity? I could swear i have a hose connected to mine that constantly drains water to the outside. Seems to me its removing it from the air, hmmm. Warm air holds water, cold air holds less. Air conditioners remove water from the air, just like a cold glass of pepsi, water condensates on the glass, the same thing happens to the cold coil in the AC, the condensate drips out of the back or into the hose as in my case., no wonder people in these threads ask dumb questions all the time, look at this advice you give, cmon man, give people answers, not headaches.
Yes a window air conditioner and even split unit systems dehumidify. The only real difference between a window air conditioner and a dehumifier is; the humidistat instead of a thermostat, and the fact that the air conditioner exhausts out doors the heat it removes from the room air (and the HUMDID room air) and the humidifier exhausts it back into the same room it is setting in. Set a window air conditioner entirely inside the room with no ducting to outdoors and instead exhaust to inside and you have a dehumidifier 1/4 th the cost of a dehumidifier.

A sealed climate controlled room is the most efficient method of mj growth. Low humidity, high air and nutrient temps, intense water or air cooled lighting lighting, CO2 at 1500 ppm to 2000 ppm. I grow darin to waste deep cahamber aero however as a good enough DEWC system to handle a hot, fast high yield grow rewuires to much expensive pumping for proper aeratio and to keep the root masses in motion so tey are all well contacted every where with water with adequate DO. The efficiency of DWC systems acy tually is quite poor for large systems. Typically quite unhealthy with small systems due to inadequate circulation. So in reality all DWC sytsems that work really well are inefficient systems as far as operating costs are concerned.
 
Top