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02-26-2007, 06:50 PM #1OPSenior Member
RO water
Well I know the benefits of RO water but dont know the effect it has on the plants....Could anyone point me to a side by side comparison between tap and RO? I know you can let the res go longer with RO and the osmotic pressure is greater on the roots letting more nutes in. What is the final result Yield and quality wise with RO vs Tap?
Cyclonite Reviewed by Cyclonite on . RO water Well I know the benefits of RO water but dont know the effect it has on the plants....Could anyone point me to a side by side comparison between tap and RO? I know you can let the res go longer with RO and the osmotic pressure is greater on the roots letting more nutes in. What is the final result Yield and quality wise with RO vs Tap? Rating: 5
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02-26-2007, 06:53 PM #2Senior Member
RO water
I think people don't use tap because of the shit that come along with it. I know i get RO water thats 0-5 ppm. My tap is around 300. Thats chlorine and all this other carp i dont want.
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02-26-2007, 07:26 PM #3Senior Member
RO water
Can anyone reccomend an affordable RO System?
Peace
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02-26-2007, 07:32 PM #4Senior Member
RO water
i know they have them on ebay for about 100 bucks sometimes cheaper. I'm sure those do a swell job. You'd just have to install. Not too hard if you are handy,
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02-27-2007, 02:09 AM #5Senior Member
RO water
I dont use RO water and I never will. For every 3 gallons of RO water you get, up to 7 or 8 gallons of water is wasted. Thats horrible for the environment. Why would you take out minerals only to re-add them with Calmag afterwords? Obviously this only applies to people who have good water to begin with, but I know too many people that spend tons of money on water bills and filters using RO on water that I use with absolutely no deficiencies with a ton of different strains and growing methods and dont filter it through anything. I will argue that RO water does not hold pH stable nearly as well and I will also argue that when you get rid of all those elements and minerals, your nutrients have less to bond too. For people with algae blooms and bad water (what I consider high ppm over 250 and pH of over 7) then I think RO is neccessary but I think a ton of people could get the same results with tap water.
The more money you spend on an RO system, the longer your filters last and the less water you waste. Its worth it. You will pay the difference in water bills within a year.
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02-27-2007, 02:24 AM #6Senior Member
RO water
My tap water is about 220 pH in the 7s. My bitch is looking nice! On rez changes I add 10 gal of water then my 3 part nutes 1:2:3 ratio since I am in week 2 of bloom, then I adjust from there. This is my first hydro grow I only have 1 plant but shes a beauty and shes getting large! I have had no problems using tap water so far. I will probably flush with purified water the last week using floraKleen.
Peace
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02-27-2007, 03:25 AM #7Senior Member
RO water
yeah, ima get one for sure. My tap is like 7.9 and 330 ppm. Wtf huh
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02-27-2007, 05:04 AM #8Senior Member
RO water
sounds like your waysted and dont know what the flip you are sayin.
Peace
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02-27-2007, 05:43 AM #9Senior Member
RO water
Originally Posted by GodBud
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02-27-2007, 06:46 AM #10Senior Member
RO water
RaceX, whats a R.O. going to do for water with a pH over 7 besides absolutely nothing ? And, by the way, a pH of 7 is neutral. Its neither acidic or alkiline. I know its not optimal for growing, but if your water has a pH of 7.0 it needs ZERO done to it unless you are using for growing.
And Dusto, do NOT buy ya a R.O. system bro thinkin its going to lower ya pH. Waste of ya hard earned bucks. It will lower your T.D.S. (sediment, minerals, etc) and remove any chlorine, but thats ALL! Only way to lower pH is to add acid to it, and unless you had a pH of 9 or above, I would not even consider it for household use. Just live with it that you need to use pH down for ya nute solution.
The pH scale is logarithmic and as a result, each whole pH value below 7 is ten times more acidic than the next higher value. For example, pH 4 is ten times more acidic than pH 5 and 100 times (10 times 10) more acidic than pH 6. The same holds true for pH values above 7, each of which is ten times more alkaline (another way to say basic) than the next lower whole value. For example, pH 10 is ten times more alkaline than pH 9 and 100 times (10 times 10) more alkaline than pH 8.
And I know what the "flip" I am talkin about GBud......LOL:rasta: :rasta:
b0nger
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