EventHorizan
- Posts
- 15,707
- Reactions
- 49,496
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2016
- Points
- 438
it will but it will also build up heat, so its a catch 22Just got home a bit ago and it's at about 37% now lol. Damn your house is dry! Can't say that's a bad thing though. I was thinking about lowering the speed on my exhaust fan. Maybe that could give the tent a chance to build up some humidity.
I got a 440 cfm intake fan and a 440cfm exhaust fan and filterit will but it will also build up heat, so its a catch 22
Both ripping max speed and im still at 80.8. Was at 77 but i put a filter on my intake to filter any bs coming into my grow.. That reduced its efficiency a lil...I got a 440 cfm intake fan and a 440cfm exhaust fan and filter
It's not about adapting big o... I know they will grow in higher heat and lower rh... But I'm trying to perfect the environment. That's big part of the fun to me..Don't worry about rh%.
My home is around %15-30% everyday. The tent rh is between 1%-9%.
And recently I've been noticing that setting my tents target temps to around 90°+. Has sped up root and vegetative development
Here is a current shot of conditions in the main tent. Outdoor is tent conditions. Indoor is home air conditions
View attachment 657755
My micro tent averages 85° with lights on With peaks of 100° when the furnace kicks on. Then during lights off I've seen it dip to °64 before the furnace kicked on.
But overall I've noticed as long as I keep them watered they flourish in the dry high heat.
I'm wondering why peeps speak against temps above 85°? As well as low humidity. Plants adapt very well.
Here's a current shot of The Beast in the 90° 1% Rh climate.
View attachment 657756
Do you guys see any leaf taco-ing or signs of VPD stress? Nope :)
Those filters need frequent cleaning.
But once you see all the dust, dirt, and hair on your filter. You can only imagine what that would look like stuck all over your live buds trichomes. Making your final flowers taste bad. It also removes mold spores, pollen, pests etc. Worth every penny in my opinion.
It's not about adapting big o... I know they will grow in higher heat and lower rh... But I'm trying to perfect the environment. That's big part of the fun to me..
I want 79 and 70% rh. Dropping 2% every week thru flower...
Ahhhhhhh... Soil... I got you. I understand how that really contributes to the wet/dry cycle soil growers try to achieve..I'm running soil so the lower rh% helps my soil dry out more quickly.
It allows me to transplant sooner into pots slightly bigger than necessary.
I also believe the higher transpiration rate of the plants encourage a larger root system. To adequately supply the plant with the amount of water it needs.
So during the dry cycles the plants roots grow quite aggressively.
I've noticed also the plants like growing larger trunks/stems/branches to deliver all that extra water.
A lot could be said about what we consider "the ideal environment".
One could say the ideal environment is what gives you best what your looking for.
When I say adapt.
I mean that every animal/plant born into their new world. They develop within what their genetic code allows. To adapt to that world/environmemt/climate.
And as they mature in that environment it becomes their "ideal environmental parameters".
You see what I'm getting at?
Over time the "ideal parameters" in nature even change. Then the plants and animals are forced to adapt over time to flourish in their new habitat.
It then becoming their new "ideal parameters"
So basically find the sweet spot of your home/grow space. And what the temp/humidity it tends to easily stabilize at without big extra electricity inputs.
And let your plants grow into it.
Just make sure you find the upper & lower limit the plants can handle in your environment as to not allow those extreme conditions that would hurt the plants. Then you'll be golden.
I would love to run co2, but I can't with my setup. It would just get sucked out with my exhaust.Very inserting concerning different temps/rh. hahahahaha 1% thats great! The beast doesn't give a crap about environment you could probably throw her up at the north pole! Love that training buddy.
I don't plant on runnning co2 but I hear it really works well when you have higher temps.
Don't worry about rh%.
My home is around %15-30% everyday. The tent rh is between 1%-9%.
And recently I've been noticing that setting my tents target temps to around 90°+. Has sped up root and vegetative development
But overall I've noticed as long as I keep them watered they flourish in the dry high heat.
I'm wondering why peeps speak against temps above 85°? As well as low humidity. Plants adapt very well.
Here's a current shot of The Beast in the 90° 1% Rh climate.
View attachment 657756
Do you guys see any leaf taco-ing or signs of VPD stress? Nope :)
And I kept thinking wtf... now I know I'm not the only one.. I even got a huey but with lights on its no good.My rh rarely ever goes above 25% in this dust bowl.
I used to have the same heat issues with HPS, and MH here in Colorado with very little RH. Since going to LED my canopy temps are only in the low 70's with a floor temp in the high 60's. This has really helped promote happier and more healthy plants with very little humidity. I think trying to add humidity only creates more problems like mold issues. These plants will adapt to almost any growing condition!:)The higher the temp the more fluffy/airy the final product will be, it grows faster at higher temp and slower at lower temps. Having a cool constant 75f temp for flower gives you denser nugs.
I agree... I think the problem occurs when rh is raised but ambient Temps are high. And the changing from high rh to low rh rapidly is bad too. I'm beginning to think if I can't control getting a higher rh with lights on then it kinda defeats the purpose as if I understand correctly, what we are really trying to control is the opening of the stomatitis and allowing normal cooling of the leaf.. Am I on the right track..I used to have the same heat issues with HPS, and MH here in Colorado with very little RH. Since going to LED my canopy temps are only in the low 70's with a floor temp in the high 60's. This has really helped promote happier and more healthy plants with very little humidity. I think trying to add humidity only creates more problems like mold issues. These plants will adapt to almost any growing condition!:)
Looking like ramen noodles! Nice root porn!2 out of the 3 Pure Afghans are male so they gotta go but here's some root porn! 1 is female so that's sweet.
Too bad one of the males was the seedling that grew two tops by itself :(
View attachment 658367
View attachment 658366 View attachment 658368
And here's the other
View attachment 658369
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?