TDS Meter Question

joneric1014

Active Member
I just ordered in a new set of meters, and calibrated them, but cant find any reference to my question in the FAQs, so Ill ask here.

Whats my target range for TDS?


Thanks!

Jon
 

Roseman

Elite Rolling Society
PPM for Hanna Chart PPM


Seedlings, Early Sprouts 100 to 250

Early Vegging 300 to 400

Full Vegetation 450 to 700


Early Blooming 750 to 950

Full Mature Blooms 1000 to 1600

Note: EC Calculations are different, here's a conversion chart :
heres a great chart that shows how different PPM can be from meter to meter... EC is the only real universal language...

 

AeroKing

Well-Known Member
Should also note that nutrient levels are extremely dependent on genetics. Some strains/phenotypes will burn at 600ppm during flowering and some will perform well at upwards of 3000ppm in some systems. You'll also have to compensate if you have hard water. BTW, the seedling stage is a good starting place for clones as well.
 

drynroasty

Well-Known Member
PH your water before adding it to rez, and make a log sheet so you can record stuff for later reference. Even the most experienced scientist keeps a log, that is how they got good at being a scientist
 

drynroasty

Well-Known Member
My last post does need some clarification, I don't want to steer anyone wrong.

My rez holds my nutes that are balanced and PH'ed to feed my roots/plants. Before i add water to my existing rez with nutes and roots/plants, I always PH it. That way I can see what my rez p PHs at prior to adding water, and adjust the PH of the new water I'm adding accordingly. If my PH is high before adding water, I lower the PH of the water to balance the system out. If it's low, then I add water with a higher PH.

I started doing that because I learned (have read) that PH in a rez with roots/plants should not be adjusted more than 1 point per 4 hours in order to not harm roots/plants. I had been adding the new water to rez and then adjusting PH. I imagine that doing so could have been harming the plants because if the PH changes with the addition of new water, an adjustment would sometimes have to be made to correct it. That means that the PH would most likely have to have started at one reading, changed after adding new water to a different reading, and then changed once again when I correct it. Now I add the water with the correct PH to balance. If PH is 5.8 in Rez, I add 5.8 water. If it is 5.7, I add water with a PH higher than 5.7... NOTE: I don't usually raise PH if it reads 5.7 in my rez because most likely, it's going to rise on it's own. If it reads 6.0 I will add water with less that 5.8 PH

I could be mistaken, but it seems that would be easier on the plants.

Again, i hope this helps and clarifies
 

potroast

Uses the Rollitup profile
That's about the way that I do it, d&r. :bigjoint:

Back to the TDS question, the thing to realize is that the strength of the nutes is dependent on the other factors of growth, amount of light and temps/humidity and amount of CO2. Together these determine what the plant can use.

HTH :mrgreen:
 
Top