pH Meter and EC Meters
1. Why Use These Expensive Meters?
2. How To Use Them
2. General Tips
Is the yield of your plants not as large as expected? Do your plants often
display "burnt" symptoms of over fertilization?
The solution might be to start
using pH and EC meters.
1. Why Use pH and EC Meters?
A pH meter measures the acidity of the water on a scale from zero to 14. This scale
is not a linear scale, but an exponential scale. This means that the difference between
a pH of six and a pH of seven is gigantic. When the pH is too high or too low, the roots
cannot take up the nutrients in the proper proportions. Generally, this will show up in
the plant as deficiencies of one nutrient or another, and as burnt leaf tips, caused by
overfertilization of one nutrient. The result is that growth will slow, the yield will
be low, and ultimately, the plant may die.
One remedy is to give the plants fewer
nutrients, but then they are certain to develop even more deficiencies, and the yield
will not be as good as it can be. When the pH is just right, it is unlikely that deficiencies
will occur. The plant will be able to take up the nutrients in the correct proportions and
overfertilization will be a thing of the past.
In other words: with the wrong pH, half the recommended nutrients will cause over
fertilization. With the right pH, the full recommended dose will make for healthy and
strong plants.
An EC meter measures the electrical conductivity of the water. Clean water has a low EC.
When you add nutrients and pH adjusters, the EC will go up. You can use this for measuring
how many nutrients can put in the water without causing overfertilization.
It can be hard sometimes to eyeball the required amount of nutrients. Sometimes, you're
not quite sure how big your container water is or you have no means of measuring the nutrients
accurately. Even if all these things are no problem, it is still possible that the recommended
dosage of nutrients as printed on the label is too low for your plants, and your plants would
benefit from a higher dose. Using an EC meter together with a pH meter, you can measure the
optimum dose for your plants without causing overfertilization.
2. How To Use pH and EC Meters
Growing in soil
The pH should be 6.4 when you sprout the seeds or plant the clones. As the weeks go by, slowly
lower the pH until it is 6.0 during the last month of flowering. This will allow the plants to
take up fewer nutrients when they are little and more nutrients when they are growing and flowering.
Similarly, the EC should be 1.0 when you sprout the seeds or plant the clones. Slowly raise the
EC to 2.0 for the last four weeks of flowering.
3. General Tips
The pH can be lowered by using vinegar, or you can buy special pH Down from the bigger
garden supply stores. These stores will also sell pH Up.
Adjusting the pH can be maddening
sometimes, because the scale is exponential. In practical terms, this means that you have to lower
the pH or raise the pH by adding very small amounts of adjusters. If your pH is too high, and
you add too much pH Down, you have to add pH Up. This can go on for while, and then your EC might
be too high.
Recalibrate the pH and EC meters about once a month. Some meters need a special storage solution
for the sensor. Please be sure to buy this storage solution as well, it will make the difference
between a well-working meter and a useless meter.
Do not use the EC meter without also measuring and adjusting the pH. If you use the EC meter
only, you almost certainly kill your plants by over fertilization. You can, however, use a pH
meter without an EC meter as long as you don't add more nutrients than recommended on the label
of the nutrients bottle.