Hey TB,
I had a question about the biocontrols, do you use any sort on check valve for drip control? I'm looking at some inpingment style nozzle similar to the biocontrols but I would need a solenoid for each nozzle. I have 6 totes in my tent and lots of poly tubing. the runoof after a spray cycle can be substantial.
nuggly
No checkvalve if you want the full hp roots- it's more than just drip control as I will explain... The best way is to have a solenoid per nozzle, and the solenoid as close to nozzle as possible. It is a bit of an investment, however, you cannot likely achieve hp-roots without this as the pressure ramp up/ramp down during then spray cycle (due to JG/PEX line expansion/contraction) causes larger droplets to throw out at the lower pressures at each end of the cycle and the large droplets engulf all your 30-80micron drops and effectively cancel them out so that you will be achieving LP-aero with all your fancy hp gear. You can incorporate a check valve to mitigate some of the pressure issues, however no checkvalve has the same cracking and closing pressure, and therefore only a solenoid can yield the perfect results. Again, Atomizer once put it- "it's like throwing a bucket of paint on a canvas, airbrushing a masterpiece, then tossing another bucket of paint over the canvas"... Get the visual?
It's worth mentioning again that the bios tend to have 1 or 2 out of every ten that are duds (they will exchange them for free however), and the rest have mostly imperfect spray patterns when compared to eachother. However, fret not-they still grow the best roots with their droplet size, spray pattern, and excellent throw. Every person using the red cloudtops and other similar nozzles have all had the same issue of the roots making a large ball that eventually chokes itself off, whereas the bios seem to make longer flowing roots that go to the bottom of the chamber and then climb up the walls, filling the chambers in a nice even spread out manner.
You are much better off with less chambers, having more volume each, as the mist really needs the room to spread out and disperse before striking the walls. Cavadge's 3 issues were those small buckets, not using enough solenoids, and the type of nozzles he used. I recommend taking all of his excellent building advice and explanation of the components, but then understanding the couple drawbacks to his designs and doing better on them...