The only things I use are the flora series, Calimagic, and Hydroguard. If I were to bump up feed, how much.
Like I said I’m currently using 1tsp of Micro, 3 tsp of Bloom, 1tsp of Calimagic, and 2ml of hydroguard per gallon. Using Zero Water filtered water. EC of 1.8
I’m not using the Lucas method, it was just an example of how I thought “gro” wasn’t even really needed. I’m using that chart up above that was updated in September. But I thank all of you for your input. Hopefully @bluter will comeback with super sweet knowledge soon
good job on the hydroguard.
i haven't used gh in years and i haven't measured hydro nutes by the tsp since the 80's. if you are using measuring spoons you can't trust the conversion to ml - it's a thumb in the wind at best.
i use syringes and measure in metric by ml/L. the more control over parameters you have in dwc the better.
your ec sounds about right if not a touch hot for dwc hydro. 1.7 - 1.8 is near or at the ceiling. i ran mine a bit lower in dwc.
it looks like you're just running the micros and the pk side of the 3 part nute system. gh works best with a flower booster in hydro. the 3-part will mostly get you there, but the base nutes alone won't hold a candle to other base nute lines. AN also gets a well deserved knock for the same thing.
you could either hold hard here for a bit, or even drop the ec a tad. the plant will probably continue eating itself, but will pretty much get there. - sorta typical base nute gh grow. or - you could drop it down just a touch, and add a flower booster.
gh probably has a matching booster for that line. they used to have a well liked one yrs ago. dunno about now. you'd need to get used to syringes and ml / L or ml / gal as a measurement to make it happen though. you're working in differences that teaspoons can't play with.
i'd leave the micros and cal-mag where they are now, drop the Bloom a few ml, and add a flower booster. if it's your first grow you might just wanna work it out on base nutes to get the experience. boosters can be dangerous til you get used to them.