I grew 45 plants, I started with a few more but I killed several because they were pissing me off. The 7 Blue Dream jungle trees accounted for a lot of my weight.

I had severe spider mites which hit me very hard, and the the sprays that went with it.

I used some methods which are not orthodox-

It was a complicated grow and although it was hydroponic I used semi aeroponic "Suckit Buckets". For my biggest yielding plants the roots were dangling in air about 90% of the time without misters.

The day and night simulation was achieved with 3 timers and about 12 light fixtures positioned all over the room; some at ground level. A sunrise, midday, sunset, and eventing twilight was emulated. I used different spectrums and I had my 2 1000 watt lights mounted vertically but they were tilted so they hit the plants at an angle. The temperature was not steady but it fluctuated several degrees. Light intensity also fluctuated with strange patterns in addition to the day simulation, and during midday the lights were pushed to extremes for just 15 minutes followed by a cooling off.

I used my own ideas in how to manage my solution in reguards to nutrients and I refer to it simply as "Perpetual Instauration" because it was realtime:

I used permanent injectors which would feed the nutrients at 1 drop approximately every 4 seconds when pumps were on right into the waterlines leading to all of the beds. I never went over 1/3 of the recommended nutrient levels per gallon per 2 week period. I used about 150-200 gallons in my system, and my res was connected to several DWC units through a self perpetuating siphon. My reservoir was only about 25 gallons which was less than some of my beds. As the waterline in the reservoir went down, it was instantly balanced by the siphon streaming in from those other bins. In essence there was no central reservoir at all. I only changed my water 2 times in 3 months, one of those being for flush which I did do. Because my nutrient levels were so low my plants were not stressed and they still received all of their nutrients because of the large volume. I used regular tap water. My water temps were constantly between exactly 69 and 70 degrees. I did not measure my PPM or EC but my PH was between 5.7 and 6.0. The solution was recirculated very quickly because it was pumped at about 800 gallons per hour. My aeration was overkill and my solution resembled something close to a milky foam when it was pumped to my beds.

If you guys have any other questions please let me know because I recorded all of this data.