1MARV31
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Lol. ThanksMaybe to strong of a nute solution mate I’m sure someone else on here will chip in that has a bit more know how than me man good luck with it mate lights to close maybe
Plants differ in their resistance to everything. I repeat my above comment, nutes are not food for plants. You can run way lower than that, without hurting their growth. They can only use fertilizer to the extent allowed by their supply of light, CO2 and water. High fertilizer levels don't accelerate growth, and can easily harm your plant, as you are seeing.Thanks guys. But we have another plant tht is in week 3. But no burns or anything. But I will lower it to 1000 ppm
Not everything is simple. If you aren't willing to study and learn basic plant biology, you will struggle at growing, because you won't understand the 'why' of what is happening.lol simplify it for us. We new to growing. So it not feed. It's lights
I can't tell anything with those colors. Regular light to make things very apparent.It's also not a light issue. In the top photo, the bud tips are the healthiest part (middle, and right). If the issue were too much light, the tips would be burned, and the lower part of the bud would be OK. He's running a high ppm, we see signs of burn. When your hear hoofbeats, think of horses, not zebras.
@1MARV31 said above, ". Ppm is 1200-1300. Wt else is happening. Ppm was 1800 but we dropped it." We're trying to explain the readily visible burnt foliage, when the OP was running 1800 ppm. A quick review of a couple vendors for hydro nutrients reveals a consensus that 1500ppm is a common upper limit for safety to the plant. Here is one, see middle of the page. Excess fertilizer causes burned foliage. I am curious as to what you hope to learn from additional pictures that would add to our understanding.I can't tell anything with those colors. Regular light to make things very apparent.
Gee, I had no idea there is a limit on pictures.@1MARV31 said above, ". Ppm is 1200-1300. Wt else is happening. Ppm was 1800 but we dropped it." We're trying to explain the readily visible burnt foliage, when the OP was running 1800 ppm. A quick review of a couple vendors for hydro nutrients reveals a consensus that 1500ppm is a common upper limit for safety to the plant. Here is one, see middle of the page. Excess fertilizer causes burned foliage. I am curious as to what you hope to learn from additional pictures that would add to our understanding.