Quasar Jones
Member
My first clones dried to a crisp. Hopefully this thread can turn into a how to if yall have good input.
Here is what the size of the clones/root at start:
I feel like my chamber had good mist amount, but since the clones roots are so small, perhaps not enough surface area for them anyways.
Below was my nozzle set up and a misting demo, my system is all 1/4" flex tube, aquatec 6800>shutoff switch(95PSI-70PSI)>2 gallon accumulator tank> solenoid> Nozzles(trying to fix this part with this thread)
Was doing 2 sec/5 min intervals
This is what I've found:
1. is the amount of mist in my video enough? Am I close, or am I orders of magnitude off?
2. Is separate nozzle system needed for first stages of growth,(i.e closer and pointed directly at root sites)? I don't understand nozzle to root site proximity and whether you should point nozzle at root site or rely on swirling mist/air current for proper saturation.
3. Is it ok if mist collects on walls/roof?
4. How do you calculate(what is the equation) for how many nozzles pump/line size will support?
Here is what the size of the clones/root at start:
I feel like my chamber had good mist amount, but since the clones roots are so small, perhaps not enough surface area for them anyways.
Below was my nozzle set up and a misting demo, my system is all 1/4" flex tube, aquatec 6800>shutoff switch(95PSI-70PSI)>2 gallon accumulator tank> solenoid> Nozzles(trying to fix this part with this thread)
Was doing 2 sec/5 min intervals
This is what I've found:
Put the 4 nozzles on a single line and feed the line from both ends using a tee on the pump. The modded layout gives you an even pressure across the nozzles and minimises loss from excessive tee fittings (original top layout) or excessive tube lengths (bottom pic layout). View attachment 1692297
Loss increases with flow rate, it`d be best to use 1/2" tube throughout if you can.
1gpm flow through 3ft of 1/4" tube will cost you 1.54psi. (42" head). The same 1gpm through 3ft of 1/2" tube will cost you 0.05psi. (1.35" head)
You`d need a pump capable of at least a 7ft head to drive 2 nozzles with 1/4" tubing. The same pump with 1/2" tubing could handle 62 nozzles
Fatman7574 said:Application is at a rate such that the nutrient solution occupies up to 0.001 percent of the chamber volume at all times. So a cubic meter is 1000 liters so (1000 L *1000 ml/L) * (0.001/100) = 10 ml. That means at all times (with a chamber of one cubic meter) you need up to 10 ml of nutrient inside the chamber in an atomized state. This would mean with such a cahmber empty spray in 10 ml and see how long that remains in an atomized state. If say it appears 25% is gone in 1 minute that would mean every minute you need to spray 2.5 ml to maintain the 10 ml you desire in the chamber. This is without accounting for plant up take after the plants roots are in the chamber. The plants wil need an increased amount of nutrient solution, but not so much that you can actually see water droplets accumalating on the roots and dripping off (over saturation). Water droplets should also not form on the net pots. The atomixed nutrients should just be enough for the roots to feel damp.
1. is the amount of mist in my video enough? Am I close, or am I orders of magnitude off?
2. Is separate nozzle system needed for first stages of growth,(i.e closer and pointed directly at root sites)? I don't understand nozzle to root site proximity and whether you should point nozzle at root site or rely on swirling mist/air current for proper saturation.
3. Is it ok if mist collects on walls/roof?
4. How do you calculate(what is the equation) for how many nozzles pump/line size will support?
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