done abit of testing of my water..
and the water out of my tap was 288ppm
and then i filtered another sample through an aqua britta machine and it came through at 163ppm..
then i left them both to stand for 24houurs.
the water that came straight out of my tap was now 363ppm from 288ppm?
and the water that i fileterd which came out of my tap is now 198ppm from 163ppm is this normal?
is this normal for it raise after you leave it to stand for the ppm to raise
Hi
im also new to ppm and ph meters.
i did the same test...I have a dafi filter "same as brita"
330 ppm tap water.
filter once 250 ppm.
filter twice 200 ppm.
My ppm also raised overnight cant remember the numbers..
my ppm was not stable with tap water. In 12 hours it go from 5.7 to 6.4 ph
but with the filter water it go from 5.7 to 5.85 in 12 hours.
so now my ph is stable but the filter removes most of the calcium and magnesium in the water.
cal / mag deficiency.
Like TheLittleBoyWhoPointed said
Tap water can vary from tap to tap.
I use gh nutes hard water.. my nute havent got any calcium in it.. calsium from the tap water. and almost no magnesium in it..it also comes from the tap water. but using the filter removes most of the calsium and magnesium. thats why the water is more "taste more soft". but now my ph is stable....
hope the info helps a litte bit about your water....
thanx to Shabang for the info below
It's simple to find out if you are using too much food or not enough by watching the nutrient concentration levels in your tanks day to day. Don't be concerned with the exact reading, rather watch how it rises and falls from each day to the next. The differences between when you put the solution into the tank and the readings you get several hours later or the next day are what tell you if your plant is eating, drinking or happy.
Start with 1.00 EC (or a SAFE nutrient strength). Next day, if it reads 1.4, it means your plants have been using water and your nutrient solution is becoming more concentrated. This means the concentration of nutrients is too high, so you dilute.
If the meter reads lower than the previous day, 0.7 say, it tells you that the plants are eating nutrients faster than they are drinking water, so you should increase your nutrient strength. If it remains the same, your feeding schedule is on target for now. The nutrient/water intake fluctuates with the growth of the plant, so you must continually monitor it day to day.
Your plants will tell you the optimum nutrient levels. When they are receiving optimum food and water, the readings remain constant. The more you do it, the easier it gets. The reason no one can tell you what PPM/EC levels to use is because every garden is different and every plant has different requirements due to their particular environment. That's why you have a ball park starting figure, but after that your plants will tell you almost exactly what they require.
Peace