The buds continue to gain weight, although more slowly than they did a few weeks ago. It shows that we are reaching the end of flowering. The plant looks quite good in general and I really want to try the harvest.
@Psilocubensis, It also occurred to me to increase the size of the container little by little. If you do, make sure to use a rather large hydroponics pot, otherwise it will be hard to get the root ball through the hole when you want to move it to a larger container. For example, in my case the pots were 7.5 cm in diameter and the root ball would not have come out of the hole since week 3. Surely i will do what you say in future grows but using 14.5cm hydroponic pots. Even so I worry that it is not enough, but I do not have the possibility to buy them bigger.
@027Hempsei, to save nuts I do believe you can upgrade the rez as the root grows, maybe start on 1 gal, then go to 4/5 gal, which is easy to find a bucket of this size, then you change to the final rez.
You might only need the 55L when it's already very big.
I like the idea of modular processes, that you can adapt and keep a high efficiency.
And it was you! I like to spread the word of Peltier! It's easy and cheap to lower some degrees.
@Psilocubensis, @Psilocubensis, Yes, quite a lot of nutrients are spent. A couple of Advanced Hydroponics cans have died during this crop;)
I can not think of a way to save nutrients by keeping the size of the tank intact. That's why I told you to keep in mind that you will need a fairly long period of growth to take advantage of the tank as it deserves, otherwise you will be "wasting" nutrients that you will not take advantage of.
The only way I see to make profitable the cost of nutrients is to obtain larger plants that produce in accordance with the nutrients used to fill the tank. You will be spending a lot, but also producing a lot, which does not matter to me as long as it maintains good efficiency. I have not achieved this in this crop because of the time cuts I told you. I think the plants have been too small for these containers and that I have actually spent more nutrients than necessary. But having this information I am sure that the next crop will be much more efficient.
As for the temperature of the water, I fortunately grow in a garage that has a very cold floor and also maintains fairly stable temperatures. My containers are in contact with the ground, I do not have a cultivation tray, so only with the cold that is detached from the ground is enough to keep the tank at 17-20ºC even though the temperatures in the tent are much higher. In winter I have to put some water heater to help me climb some degrees (they are not very expensive), but at this time I do not do anything, By magic, the temperature of the tank is about 10ºC lower than the outside temperature.
I saw your comment about the peltier in the diary of my Kali AK and it seems to me quite a good idea for those who need to cool the tank some degrees. For my part I only have problems in winter and what I need is to upload them, which is easy.
Sorry for the tirades I'm not very good explaining. You already have the photos available. I may have been very optimistic with the 60/70% that i've said before. Let's leave it at 50/60% (keep in mind that a ball is made when removing them from the water, but in the tank they float, expanding and occupying all the available surface)
PD: The water level is so low in the photos because I have not watered for a long time. At the beginning of the root washing I changed the tank so that it only had water and Final Solution and since then I have not watered anything, I have left it to drink from the tank to its pace.
Another thing I have observed is that with cooler temperatures in the tank the root development is better, but the absorption of nutrients decreases. I have noticed this very clearly because the Kali AK, which had a couple of degrees more than its companions (I do not know why) has developed a much smaller root ball than the rest, but was the one that most lowered the level of TDS in each measurement, which means that its little roots were absorbing nuts like crazy. However, at Royal AK, which has a somewhat larger root ball than the rest, the nutrients dropped much more subtly. It also makes sense that if it costs you more to obtain the nutrients, you will develop a larger root ball to try to reach more of them