NEW NFT (nutrient film technique) SOG SETUP

sherriberry

New Member
i went with the pvc across the top.

it is 3/4 inch.

Holes are 11/64


Holes are every 3 inches.

Water is uniform coming out of all of them.

by far the easiest and best way.
 

repvip

Well-Known Member
This is sort of a reply to streetlegal--I was also inspired by Stinkbud and used his system for awhile.

I designed a custom NFT system similar to his design, but it is so simple.

The system is made of:

4"x4" fence posts
1/2" x 3/8" black vinyl tubing
1/2" T-joints (for tubing)
Some 3/4" PVC to hold the fence posts together.

Seeing as how this thread is boring with no pics.. (Sorry! but true) I'm here to spice it up!

Of course there is a rubbermaid reservoir, aerated. The biggest problem I have had was pump size. Used pumps way to big at first... pay attention to flow rate!
 

Attachments

repvip

Well-Known Member
OP:

I like the idea of a single wide gutter... I have been trying to think of a way to do that..

150+ plants will definitely fit in a 4' x 8' area... My units hold 40 each, and are 5' x 1.5' each..

Not much more to add... I think you have good ideas! Keeping up with clones will be a bitch, but if you time them right you can clone the bottom branches of your veggies before/when you put them into flower.
 

tea tree

Well-Known Member
yu guys ever read about NFT spreader mats. If yu are doing something really wide a spreader mat might be cool. It goes along the bottom and spreads the nutrient solution out evenly along a wide flat area. In drain tubes or fence posts prob not need but in wide flood tray with lid might be cool.
 

fatman7574

New Member
A casual few lines: Dr. Lynn P. Morgan


The nutrient film technique (NFT) was developed during the late 1960's by Dr Allan Cooper at the Glasshouse Crops Research Institute in the U.K. With the NFT system, a thin film of nutrient solution flows through plastic channels, which contain the plant roots with no solid planting media. The root mat develops partly in the shallow stream of recirculating solution and partly above it. It is extremely important to maintain this basic principle of a nutrient film because it ensures the root system has access to adequate oxygen levels. The key requirements in achieving a nutrient film situation are described by Cooper (1996) as being:

1) To ensure that the gradient down which the water flows is uniform and not subject to localized depressions, not even a depression of a few millimeters.

2) The inlet flow rate must not be so rapid that a considerable depth of water flows down the gradient.

3) The width of the channels in which the roots are confined must be adequate to avoid any damming up of the nutrient by the root mat. If inadequate, it is to be expected that yields will be directly proportional to channel width.

4) The base of the channel must be flat and not curved, because there will be a considerable depth of liquid along the center of a channel with a curved base, merely because of the shape of the base (Cooper 1996).

The above definition of NFT is basically as close as one can get to aero without being aero. Aero is typically practiced poorly in small round tubes by many pot growers so the root mass is too large for the size of the channel bottom. This means tube encourages root piling and does not allow for water penetraion to the roots full mass encouraing the growth of anerobic bacteria. The root mass must renmain thin and the water depth is only to waet the thin mass. Deep roost in deep water leads to root rot. NFT is chiefly like except the clearly define that the root mass should be thin and widely spread and that the layer of water is very minimal. Moisture really not running water. Trickles out the end of the channels is more than adequate.


Horticulturalists recommend flat wide channels and water of a very, very minimal depth. The water depth is supposed to be a few millimaters. That is less than one-tenth of an inch deep. Roots recieve the majority of their oxygen from surrounding air not DI in the water. Water DO does not diffuse well through the water surround deep root masses laying in water.
 

streetlegal

Well-Known Member
This is sort of a reply to streetlegal--I was also inspired by Stinkbud and used his system for awhile.

I designed a custom NFT system similar to his design, but it is so simple.

The system is made of:

4"x4" fence posts
1/2" x 3/8" black vinyl tubing
1/2" T-joints (for tubing)
Some 3/4" PVC to hold the fence posts together.

Seeing as how this thread is boring with no pics.. (Sorry! but true) I'm here to spice it up!

Of course there is a rubbermaid reservoir, aerated. The biggest problem I have had was pump size. Used pumps way to big at first... pay attention to flow rate!
Hey man, im jealous you got the jump on me and are already producing! and those LEDs are doing the job.
I gather you got rid of the sprayers all along the channel and now pump the water in one end via the vinyl tubing like dedicated NFT now, not aero.
What cycle is ur pump on?.. And how did you gauge ur ideal flow rate?
I dont know why more ppl aint growing this way, especially if $$ means something to ya.bongsmilie
 

repvip

Well-Known Member
Hey man, im jealous you got the jump on me and are already producing! and those LEDs are doing the job.
I gather you got rid of the sprayers all along the channel and now pump the water in one end via the vinyl tubing like dedicated NFT now, not aero.
What cycle is ur pump on?.. And how did you gauge ur ideal flow rate?
I dont know why more ppl aint growing this way, especially if $$ means something to ya.bongsmilie
Good question... I will never go back to dirt!

I did get rid of the sprayers... however I think it would work better with sprayers... I just didn't want to use 1000 ez-clone sprayers, haha. Obviously from the pics it is working...

Once you get "aeroroots" established you are fine without sprayers.. in my experience at least.. I would like to continue spraying for the first two weeks in flowering, so a small design change is in order.


I'm still using the 1/5 cycle.. the same timer is running quite a few pumps on that schedule. It would be nice to have different cycles for nightime, daytime, younger plants, older plants etc.

To control flow I chose different pump sizes instead. I can tell from direct experience that flow rates of >10 liter/min are detrimental to growth! For some reason I thought more was better. Flow rates of ~10 liter/min/channel has been working nice. Currently trying one with the industry recommeded flow rate of 1 liter/min/channel and it is working well, so far, probably the best. This all applies to no sprayers, just NFT.

Not sure how you can control flow rate when using sprayers though... I would need so many.. it would take a pump capable of >20 liter/min/channel to properly operate all of the sprayers... but then again, maybe it doesn't matter in the combo aero/nft situation?

The Dr. Cooper article quoted above is good. Here are a couple more that are interesting:
http://www.agnet.org/library/eb/330/
You really need to read the whole paragraph under 'Aeroroots'

The problem I am having is, without sprayers, the hanging roots are drying out too much. The plants end up ok, but I am sure yield is suffering. There should be more humidity in the system, to "induce root hairs" in the hanging aeroroots.

I think you can see how I am leaning... add sprayers. Even just one sprayer at the input, and sealing the system to keep the roots humid, would probably go a long way.
 

skunkcow

Member
the single wide gutter approach is sweet and a great idea, I may try this myself, thanks for the pics and info! :eyesmoke:
 

repvip

Well-Known Member
sherriberry:

Did you end up doing sprayers as the source of the NFT?

Does this mean you will be running the sprayers constantly?

I was worried about the rez temp creeping up, if I were to run my NFT constantly. Maybe I should try that with a tiny pump first, before adding sprayers.
 

sherriberry

New Member
sorry not to post sooner, i thought i did last night, come to find out i got an error message i guess...

anyway, a couple things..

nft does have to be a thin layer UNLESS the water contains plenty of oxygen.

there is a grow page some of you might have seen in another forum about a guy growing 42 lbs of bud off 10 plants... and its not a lie... heres the link...

http://www.thcfarmer.com/forums/f131/42-pound-10-plant-tree-grow-14877/


anyway, ive been brainstormign the past few days trying to figure out if i want to do something like that in my bloom room...

only thing is his strain dna is what utilizes such few plants in such a large space, where as we dont use those genes probably, so im trying to figure out if theres a way to blend his ideas with my own.

I love my veg nft table...

i want to keep it in my assembly line because it is just so easy to work with, as plants get big, you can move them to other holes and away from eachother.

i do not have my sprayers on all the time.. infact very rarely, once every 20 min, and only for 10 sec because it drains my res to where the 1700gph pump starts slurping in air.

i could do it more often, but im trying to save the pump life, and the basic nft pinciple is working GREAT!

i have a fountain (horizontal pvc pipe with holes drilled in it every 3 inches) across the top of the table... this does exactly what it sounds, it spits water out like a drinking fountain would, but in like 30 spots.

The pvc pipes that the sprayers are hooked into sit on the floor of the table.

i drilled the holes first in the pvc, then put a bunch of double sided tape down,
THEN PUT DOWN PANDA WRAP AS THE BLADDER TO KEEP IT ALL WATERPROOF,

THEN put the sprayers THROUGH the panda wrap, into the pipes.

so its white panda wrap, and little red sprayers, and thats all the eye can see.

the pipes are under the panda wrap and make the lanes for the water.

i have simple wood walls around the perimeter of the whole table, and the one big piece of panda wrap comes up and over the walls, and its just draped over the sides.

the the lid can either be latice from lowes, covered in panda wrap (and holes cut for the net pots in the panda wrap)

or, you can get the pvc panel stuff they put in public bathroom walls,

and just use that as a lid and cut holes in it for the net pots.

either way, the lids need support beams, so i just cut 3-4 inch pvc pipe sections, and taped them with some waterproof sticky ass tape to the BOTTOM of the lid.

These beams sit directly on the panda wrap on the floor of the nft table.

My res is under the bottom left corner of the table, where i have 2 drains.

These 2 drains sandwich the panda wrap to the floor, and nipple out under the floor of the nft table...

then the lid of my res, has 2 holes cut that BARELY let the 3/4 inch pvc pipe slide through.. and these two holes HOLD THE PVC PIPE IN PLACE, so all i have to do is slide it up a few inches AROUND the drain nipples, and the water goes down the pipes into the res,

or, i slide them down, and then i can slide the res out sideways from under the table.

The fountain comes through the LID via a single pvc pipe, and unce under the lid, it T's in both directions from the top MIDDLE of the table... and has holes in it all the way across.

i installed a ball valve for pvc pipes in the feed pipe to the fountain so that i could regulate how much flow without buing 10 pumps to figure it out...

im using a 300gph pump, and its more than just a FILM on the floor of the table, but guess what, it doenst matter...

the water gets so much air in it with this system that its working great so far...

i dont even use this valve... and i think one could have an even bigger pump, but i think im happy with mine.

down by the drains, the water gets over an inch deep.

halfway down the table, its about 1/4 inch deep.

up at the top, its film.

all plants everywhere are doing equally as well however.

i keep the sprayes as part of the equation because it adds air to the water by shooting the majority of my res through 50 nozzles.... and i hate the idea of screwing in 50 nozzles into pvc pipes was a lot of time and thumb blisters... wasted.

if i build another, i wont use as many nozzles, and use a smaller pump... this way it doenst havet o drain the res so fast, and i could keep it on constantly.

THe lid btw has a flap about 3 inches in from the edge, all the way around the perimeter that hangs down INSIDE THE TABLE, and this flap keeps water from flying out the crack between the lid and the walls, AND IT KEEP LIGHT OUT.

this flap sits just inside the walls about 1/4 inch, and this flap is about 2 inches down, and continuous around the whole perimeter of the lid.

hope that stuff helps. Check out that link up there, and see that deep water is fine as long as its kept moving at high speeds...
 

sherriberry

New Member
i just realized something that i might have overlooked that is very important.

My res is pretty damn small.

its one of the small roughneck tubs from rubbermade.

thats right, the ones that are only about a foot tall.

THis might seem like a bad thing.. but..

i cant attest to the oxygen levels in the water staying hight IF YOU USE A LARGER ONE, FOR I HAVE NOT...

and if you think about it, this means ALL the water in the rez gets moved around more often... keeping all of it oxygenated...

instead of it getting very long of a break before its pumped out again.

my table is half full of plants up on the lid, and i have some plants over a foot tall now, and THEY DRINK OVER A GALLON A DAY,

i am currently using the SLURPING noise of the sprayer pump as an indicator when its time to add another gallon... and then i add one, and it doenst slurp anymore...

until tomorrow :)

This keeps the nutes fresh too i guess.

all in all, i would say it holds a total of over 6 gallons with the table flooded.

Honestly... i think my rez might overflow if i shut off the pump for i have added more water after the tables fountains were already on, so the table is holding a lot of water too.

but i have battery backup for my pumps, so im not overly concerned with this overflow aspect if the power ever did go out.

I also like the idea of using 2 pumps, one for the fountain and one for the sprayers, just incase a pump fails, the plants stay wet enough they dont die.

2 hours is all it takes i think, and they are gone.

i had a clone tub with 3 week old plants lose power for 1.5 hours, and i lost a couple plants, all were laid over, but most came back to life.
 

repvip

Well-Known Member
Nice! I have a better picture in my head now...

Got to love the battery backup! Just got mine figured out.. nothing fancy--a car battery and cheap power inverter.

The one bad thing I found (and, maybe, maybe its just me) but the cap art-dne recycle timer wouldn't run off the modified sine wave inverter (how the cheap ones work) so I still had to plug and unplug for 6 hours the other night. Dang snow! A cheap manuel timer would work, or a much more expensive power inverter!

Is it ok to transfer from Aero/NFT into DWC? Is there any concern of drowning the [aero]roots?
 

fatman7574

New Member
Sure you can grow pot in DWC or on a table with some combination of something as above. It can even grow well enough for some people to be satisfied. There are many people happy with small yubr aero sstems and they are really quite sad as thery are not much better than a DWC. It is even questionable if a DWC can even out perform a good soil grow. Likely not. There are better ways. Like standard hydroponics Ebb and Flow. Or the kings of growing: high pressure aeropinic in deep chambers or aeromix (air atomo izing nozzles) in deep chambers or even a properly built and watered NFT. You make your choices, you live with the results. Facts are facts, science has proven what works best and pot growers using those systems, such as high pressure aero and atomizers in chambers and NFT, find that the scientists such as Cooper knew what they were taking about. In the mean time many growers still spin their wheels doing it their way or some other pot growers way they read about but don't even understand and get much more inferior set ups and performances.
 

streetlegal

Well-Known Member
Good question... I will never go back to dirt!

I did get rid of the sprayers... however I think it would work better with sprayers... I just didn't want to use 1000 ez-clone sprayers, haha. Obviously from the pics it is working...

Once you get "aeroroots" established you are fine without sprayers.. in my experience at least.. I would like to continue spraying for the first two weeks in flowering, so a small design change is in order.


I'm still using the 1/5 cycle.. the same timer is running quite a few pumps on that schedule. It would be nice to have different cycles for nightime, daytime, younger plants, older plants etc.

To control flow I chose different pump sizes instead. I can tell from direct experience that flow rates of >10 liter/min are detrimental to growth! For some reason I thought more was better. Flow rates of ~10 liter/min/channel has been working nice. Currently trying one with the industry recommeded flow rate of 1 liter/min/channel and it is working well, so far, probably the best. This all applies to no sprayers, just NFT.

Not sure how you can control flow rate when using sprayers though... I would need so many.. it would take a pump capable of >20 liter/min/channel to properly operate all of the sprayers... but then again, maybe it doesn't matter in the combo aero/nft situation?

The Dr. Cooper article quoted above is good. Here are a couple more that are interesting:
http://www.agnet.org/library/eb/330/
You really need to read the whole paragraph under 'Aeroroots'

The problem I am having is, without sprayers, the hanging roots are drying out too much. The plants end up ok, but I am sure yield is suffering. There should be more humidity in the system, to "induce root hairs" in the hanging aeroroots.

I think you can see how I am leaning... add sprayers. Even just one sprayer at the input, and sealing the system to keep the roots humid, would probably go a long way.
Ok so 1L/min per channel, thats good info for NFT, something for you to go on.
Yeh i fuckin hear ya man, geting flow rates etc down to a science is frustrating. I think this is bcos theres no exact science for Aero/NFT, the most i know is u need about "aprox" 400gph pump per 20 sprayers.
True Aero Growing' has alot more exacting info out there.

Thats wots good about the S.B system, it is just build and grow, i got the 396gph pumps and i could rest assured.. I got this Professor Compulsive side and i wanna be on top of my system from all angles but i gotta remind myself K.I.S.S.. like u said, even though theres some things u wanna change ur system is obviously working.. Cos im sticking to sprayers for flow rate ill just aim for the same amount of run-off i get from the S.B channels..

The S.B system of inserting the sprayer rails inside the channels is p.i.t.a when it comes to checking for blockages and cleaning the system..The HeathRobinson link i put up on the previous page, this is how i wanna run my new system, run hose along the channel and insert sprayers into the channel from the top.

Yo repvip, see how heathrobinson sprayers are posistioned like: X= Sprayer 0= Plant Hole 0X0X0X00x00 I take it is like this so the front plants dont get overwatered bcos there is enough water coming down from the rear sprayers, but i was just thinking on putting 1 sprayer between each hole, wot do u think?
My S.B system channels are 5' long with 7 plant sites spaced at 8 inches, i wanted to go 5sq inch spacing with my new system, think thats too close?

My System:
Im gonna have 2 sites each being 14 6' channels making a site footfrint 6'x6'. The clones will be staggered for a 2 week perpetual harvest. I will plant out half (7 channels) of the first site 98 clones then the other 98 2 weeks later then half of the second site and then the other half 2 weeks later etc so 98 plants harvested every 2 weeks 1000w over each site (might not be enough but ill see how it goes, might go 2 1000's or 3 600's) and run it flip flop, especially if i do run with 2 1000w over each table cos i wont have a 4000w spike once a day, just a constant 2000..

Also wot strains u running in the pics man? ran any others? How many 4 channel sites are u running? Getting ur ideal yield yet?bongsmilie
 

fatman7574

New Member
1 liter/min per channel from 10 inch channels with the roots spread thinly across the full channel. Slope should be at least a minimum of 1" in 40". Channel up to 90 feet long with that same pitch and flow. 96 inchs wide means approximattely 10 channels. That means a 4" by 8" bed should flow ( 1 liter/3.785 liter/gallon) * 10 channels* 60 min/hr= 158 gallons per hour, or a continous flow of 2.64 gallons per minute for a 4' by 8' bed. The plants might take up 2 pints of water per hour so 0.033 gallons per minute, so that means you need to flow 2.67 gallons per minute or 160 gallons per minute maximaum. Ant y thing over that decraeses oxygen uptake so lowers growth. That same bed 48" wide and 90 foot long would only need about 2.87 gallons per minute or 172 gallons per hour. That is with the water running 24/7.

Set in stone no. But I would be willing to bet at least four years or more of fully documented testing was used to come up with that recommended guideline. It is still the general guideline used in the commercial agricultural community. There is vaery liitle variance in the area except those trying to flow even less, not more nutrient water.
 

sherriberry

New Member
i mentioned it in my peroxide thread as well, but heres the proper place...

i think im going to build a larger scale version of the stinkbud bloom setup... but use the smaller micron sprayers fatman mentioned, and try to incorporate a solenoid that will allow one single large pump to run constantly, in one resevoir...

but alternate which fence posts get the water, using a timer.

I need advice on how to do this... id like to just get a solenoid that alternates between open one way, and open the other, like a T valve.

If anyone knows of these, point me that way. Thanks
 

tea tree

Well-Known Member
Any body ever try just getting an nft mat and keeping a low water level. I hear that thin film is awesome. Most comercial greenhouses use that tech, well I find rw drips and a huge aero setup over asian skyscrapers. I still never see anyone use an nft mat. myself I am ebb and flow. It makes me feel good :) Good luck all.
 

repvip

Well-Known Member
Any body ever try just getting an nft mat and keeping a low water level. I hear that thin film is awesome. Most comercial greenhouses use that tech, well I find rw drips and a huge aero setup over asian skyscrapers. I still never see anyone use an nft mat. myself I am ebb and flow. It makes me feel good :) Good luck all.
You make the mat sound ... supernatural or something!

Isn't it just a capillary mat to spread out the water?

I'm using cheesecloth at the bottom of my fence posts, just a single layer to keep moist in case of pump failure.

Also, I'm running one unit now continuously with a 185gph pump... so far so good, but it's really too early to tell (if there is a difference in continuous flow versus cycling 1/5 on/off). It's a 15 gallon rez with 10 gallons of nute solution, and it doesn't heat up with the pump on 24/7... I bet I could even use a smaller pump.

Yo repvip, see how heathrobinson sprayers are posistioned like: X= Sprayer 0= Plant Hole 0X0X0X00x00 I take it is like this so the front plants dont get overwatered bcos there is enough water coming down from the rear sprayers, but i was just thinking on putting 1 sprayer between each hole, wot do u think?
My S.B system channels are 5' long with 7 plant sites spaced at 8 inches, i wanted to go 5sq inch spacing with my new system, think thats too close?

My System:
Im gonna have 2 sites each being 14 6' channels making a site footfrint 6'x6'. The clones will be staggered for a 2 week perpetual harvest. I will plant out half (7 channels) of the first site 98 clones then the other 98 2 weeks later then half of the second site and then the other half 2 weeks later etc so 98 plants harvested every 2 weeks 1000w over each site (might not be enough but ill see how it goes, might go 2 1000's or 3 600's) and run it flip flop, especially if i do run with 2 1000w over each table cos i wont have a 4000w spike once a day, just a constant 2000..

Also wot strains u running in the pics man? ran any others? How many 4 channel sites are u running? Getting ur ideal yield yet?
I think a sprayer between every plant is fine. I think a sprayer every other plant is fine too. Just depends on how many sprayers you want to install and how many plant sites you will have... Fatman is the pro obviously with this... I don't know anything about medium/high pressure aero!

I actually just converted one of my NFT units today into AERO/NFT with the addition of sprayers .. with OXOOXOOXOOXOOXO X=sprayer, O=plant. This way it's only 20 sprayers per entire unit, 5 per post. Pictures attached. It was easy to get the sprayers up top, spraying down.

When using Stink's system, I had roots so massive they blocked my bottom sprayers completely, which is why I thought "fuck sprayers who needs em". That's when I converted my stink systems over to what I have now. However, my NFT units should be yielding more. I don't want a lecture from anyone... but I'm only getting 8oz per unit. 40 plants on SOG.. I was aiming for at least 10oz with the ultimate goal of a pound per unit every harvest. It's still early in my experimenting.. The sprayers should make a difference.

As for spacing... My units are 6" center to center per post, but between posts they end up being 5" center to center on the diagonal. I like 6".. However, 5" with just top colas would probably be ok... I'm not the best person to ask about spacing.. I just experiment with my own shit to see what works! I cut off the bottom 1/3 branches. A couple pics to show how crowded it gets with this spacing...

What else... I have 4 units and harvest every 2 weeks. I grow Blue Cheese by Big Buddha and AK48 by Nirvana. I've grown a few strains, and it's been a bitch to find one I like that works on my time frame.

ps I really want to try those fatman misters/sprayers, but I already have so many ecoplus pumps! I'm sick of buying more supplies. Can the ecoplus pumps run the medium pressure misters?
 

Attachments

streetlegal

Well-Known Member
i mentioned it in my peroxide thread as well, but heres the proper place...

i think im going to build a larger scale version of the stinkbud bloom setup... but use the smaller micron sprayers fatman mentioned, and try to incorporate a solenoid that will allow one single large pump to run constantly, in one resevoir...

but alternate which fence posts get the water, using a timer.

I need advice on how to do this... id like to just get a solenoid that alternates between open one way, and open the other, like a T valve.

If anyone knows of these, point me that way. Thanks
Sherriberry your talking about 'TAG' true aero growing? using a high pressure pump and misters yeh.. i read some about this and it seems you need to be VERY exact with ur nutes and set-up in general bcos ur plants react really fast. If u dont have it spot on then u pretty much better off with aero/nft hybrid..which is a heck of alot easier
Heres a cut n paste fome PodRacer
For pics of table set-ups
http://www.icmag.com/ic/showthread.php?t=15115


But those that know anything about TAGing know...its aint no cake walk.


So, what is TAG? You ask. And what is pod racing?

Well, these are the
Basics for TAG:

1. PSI > 30, 50=Ideal, 100 psi even better.
2. Interval cycling 20-30 seconds on, 3-4 minutes off (Dark periods may extend dry periods).
3.Average droplet size 50µ (micron) nozzles (acceptable ranges 30-80µ) with flows < 2 gph preferably .5-1gph with screen filters of 150 and up.
4.Target root temperatures maintained at 68F. (Mature clones lower temps/younger prefer warmer) Temperatures should never exceed 74F (Dangerous).
5. The greater the aerospace around the root zones the better—lateral root development equals bud thickness and development your goal are pom pom roots.
6. Nutrient strengths for TAG are extremely ratio sensitive. Most strains will demonstrate deficiencies in K, Ca, Mg, and P, for optimal absorption of nutrients ratios shoud be as follows:

Ca:Mg 3:1
NO3:NH4 9:1
ph is 5.4-5.8

7. Always have a back up pump or system for failure—always!
8. Root zones should be completely dark and sealed from any UV penetration. UV kills AM (bacteria that feeds the root system)
9.Always use RO water and premix nutrients before adding to systems to prevent chemicals from coming out of solution and clogging nozzles as well as 150 mesh filter or higher.


Now a more indepth if you like...


Compendium for TAG (True Aero Growing)

The principles of aeroponics differ considerably from other methods of plant propagation. Several factors influence the rapid absorption and accelerated grow that can be expected when rig designs are brought closer to the True Aero Environment. TAE

These factors establish a the optimal TAE.

This environment consists of these requirements:

Ideal rooting environments should be unrestricted with enough volume to allow every square cm of root zone to become completely coated with a micro-fine mist of 50µ average population nutrient solution every 3 to 4 minutes in under 60 seconds (preferably 20-30 second misting cycles).

Root Zone Temperatures are found to be ideally suited at approximately 68-72F for maximum efficiency, though younger plants grow faster at higher temperatures and older ones at lower—these extremes are not conducive to the microculture necessary to support the root colonies and risk of possible bad bacterial infections. The use of HG or any AM inoculant is advised and recommended.
Ideal root temperature has been established at 68F as being TAT. (Target Aero Temperature)
Root zone temperatures should see very little temperature fluctuation and absolutely no light penetration if possible. Anything above 75F should be considered dangerous to the health and well being of your plants and HydroGuard or other benefical is highly recommended. Beneficials are recommended in general as the speed and growth in a TAE is exceptional and the rooting environment needs as much support as possible to keep up with increasing growth demands.

A basic understanding of certain principles are necessary for all TAGers. These concern uptake of nutrition and supplimentation as the rapidly accelerated growth available in TAGing requires accurate and relatively precise balances of major life processes.

Here are some that will help the beginning TAGer understand the importance and value of precision delivery.

The basic principles
of aeroponic delivery are the rapid exchange of gases between the membranes of the root subculture and the plant roots. Application of a micro-fine nutrient film that is readily absorbed and evaporated before the next aerosol cycle is the goal.

The need for 50µ-target size for micro droplets is based on the findings by researchers that the average tube opening on the root hairs is approximate 20-50µ or within a range from 5-100µ.

The specific reason for this importance is as follows:

Aero isn't about DO. There really isn't that much in True aero, as I've mentioned. It has to do with uniformity of droplet size.
The mist that is created by these nozzles is micro fine and all the drops are pretty much the same size and an ideal size for optimum uptake.
You have a hundred different size balls that you are trying to get through a screen with holes that only fit things the size of a ping pong ball or smaller. Your standard mister is going to have like a 50/50 mix of sizes and the bigger ones have to hang out until something comes along to break it into several smaller balls kind of like the game 'asteroids' if you remember it.
True aero is a spray of balls that are all the size of ping pong balls or smaller, so everything goes right through the screen without having to wait to be broken up into smaller pieces.
That is what is happening on a microscopic level at your root level. The need for O2 is that it breaks down those H20 molecules and helps tear apart CO2 the O's are all what they call 'Free Radical' Meaning they bond with anything immediately. It is called Oxidation. That is why your blood is red, oxidized iron in your blood. It is how hemoglobin is created. All cells respire gases...it is smaller than water vapor or even the molecules themselves. O2 is a gas, CO2 is a gas, Nitrogen is a gas, Hydrogen is a gas these are all gases that when combined together to make a 'big ball' make water H20 or CO2 or any of the elements you are feeding your plant.



The first picture is a close-up of a lotus leaf, an example of a super-hydrophobic plant. The roughness of the leaf surface results from the coexistence of bumps about 10 µm(10 microns) wide and hollow channels of about 1 µm(micron) in diameter. The entire surface is covered by a layer of wax that makes it hydrophobic. The ability of the leaf to repel water is enhanced by the surface roughness. (Picture credit: W Barthlott)

That said:


Nozzles are geared towards irrigation and as such utilize a vortex flow, which means that the droplet size does not change with pressure but is indeed from 5 to 200 microns. The majority of the droplet population is about 100 microns, however there is a broad-spectrum of sizes.

PSI/Dan foggers will create 'true' aero fogging at around 50 to 80 microns, but doesn’t have consistent droplet sizes below 50. The best you could do would be a fogger nozzle with populations between 20-50 microns which are the Bio-Control nozzles.

Why Atomize?
Imagine two droplets of the same size, one droplet you break up [atomize] into 1000 smaller droplets and the other you leave alone. If you measure the surface area of each "small droplet" and add them up, the result will be more than the total surface area of single large droplet. Simply put, the smaller the droplet size, the more surface area you'll have at a given flow rate. More surface area translates into more efficient heat transfer, surface contact or reaction within a gas stream.

All mediums get in the way of gas exchange and mediumless growing is preferred.

Spray mist less than 20 microns tend to remain in the air as a fog and are not readily absorbed by the roots. The ideal mist size range for most plant species is 30 - 80 microns. Within this range the mist makes the most contact with the roots.

Inclines are necessary with most tubes to ensure adequate drainage.

One can reasonably expect 45% faster veg times when the TAE is achieved.

Third in importance for maximum efficiency is cycle timing of nutrient delivery, i.e. the on/off cycle.

Optimal industry standards for TAGing are 20-30 seconds of delivery to 180-240 seconds off depending on environment. Most rely on the 30/3 cycle of 30 seconds on 3 minutes off. This appears to be the maximum effective rate lessening in effectiveness as intervals become longer.

15-minute timers are not to be used in TAG as they overly saturate and dry too long for an effective TAE.

Ideal environments for TAG roots are light proof and completely opaque. Heat and light issues at root zones are the number 1 complication with aeroponic rigs designed without adequate space or drainage.

Nutrient Strengths are still under debate at this time. Current conventions suggest that in TAE nutrient uptake exceeds any other form of Faux Aero, DWC or NFT system so high levels of K and Ca/Mg are necessary in the proper ratios.

Minimum levels in liquid ferts should be as follows:



It is to my personal understanding that I believe these numbers could be much higher once nutrient profiles are established for the growth cycle of this plant. There appears to be increased issues with P/K uptake during all phases do to lockout more than over fertilization.

A community of brilliant minds has assembled to race their rigs together to watch for performance enhancement and innovation in design. All are welcomed to join in the fun and learn a little too, maybe.


There will be a number of experts docking at this station, all have exceptional knowledge and experience feel free to question them on their rigs, but be mindful to have read the above before asking any obviously stated questions. And don't hesitate to ask for validation for their design specification, they usually always have a master plan behind it all.

 
Top