looks more like Mg
I see that the lower leaves look much better, so too much or too close of light is also a possibility.
That sounds like a lot of food and a lot of light. Not sure what ideal PAR and PPM numbers are, but most of the ones I see on here are only 3 digits. I'd say it's more likely too much of something than not enough...
That's lockout. Way too much fertilizer.
If the roots are filling the bottom 2 gallon area, then they probably swallowed up the air stones right?. Well, If the bubbles aren't popping from the surface of the solution or are blocked from doing so, then they probably aren't misting the rest of the root zone when it gets down that low. 100% humidity means nothing to help keep the bare roots cool when they are more exposed like that. Its plain water in the air, without any nutes or agents you might be using like bleach to keep the roots sanitized. Its not like you can easily hookup a chiller to all the buckets either, so your roots are dangling in the same temp as the ambient air, when they should be submerged so they stay cool.
If you have it all figured out. What is the point of the thread?Respectfully I disagree, can you provide a reason?
How that could be the case without a rise in nutrient strength over time?
And surely it's an antagonism, the ratio is off. But too much, no.
Did you add each one of them and 125 per what?Initial PPM ~1500
- N 210
- P 123
- K 305
- Ca 283
- Mg 125
- S 316
- Fe 4.7
- Cu 0.3
- Bo 01.1
- Mn 1.7
- Zn 0.7
- Mo 0.1