realmeatdildo
Active Member
In many of those B-grade horror movies there were graveyards swirling with a cascading mist round the tombstones, (kind of like my living room on any Friday/Saturday night, hey, that's me in the cape with the fangs). That gas was sometimes carbon dioxide. It is heavy and so it sits and builds up like a thick fog that's fallen, like condensation vapor sitting on top of cold, frozen ground. It can be made by putting chunks of frozen CO2, also known as dry ice, into H2O which causes it to melt and turn back into a gas.
Can anyone see a problem with possibly using it as a source of CO2 in a grow room/chamber? Its advantages are that as well as aiding the growth of a plant it might also act as a coolant and possibly aid in keeping down the temperatures in grow-rooms/chambers. I think you can buy dry ice at ice cream factories where they used to pack it around boxes of ice creams when they were driving them in unrefrigerated trucks to fair grounds and swimming pool kiosks in Summer, (at least they used to when I was a kid).
*WARNING*
Just a note of warning for those of you who don't know, dry ice 'burns' skin, so I'd suggest thick gloves and tongs when handling it, unless, of course, you want to join me in my living room as the creature with the incredibly unusual skin formation patterns, and I do need a sidekick as I've found that it's really hard to hammer in those last couple of nails yourself on your own coffin as the Sun creeps up toward the horizon.
Can anyone see a problem with possibly using it as a source of CO2 in a grow room/chamber? Its advantages are that as well as aiding the growth of a plant it might also act as a coolant and possibly aid in keeping down the temperatures in grow-rooms/chambers. I think you can buy dry ice at ice cream factories where they used to pack it around boxes of ice creams when they were driving them in unrefrigerated trucks to fair grounds and swimming pool kiosks in Summer, (at least they used to when I was a kid).
*WARNING*
Just a note of warning for those of you who don't know, dry ice 'burns' skin, so I'd suggest thick gloves and tongs when handling it, unless, of course, you want to join me in my living room as the creature with the incredibly unusual skin formation patterns, and I do need a sidekick as I've found that it's really hard to hammer in those last couple of nails yourself on your own coffin as the Sun creeps up toward the horizon.