āϰāĻžāύāĻ āĻĢ (āĻŦāĻž āĻĄā§āϰā§āĻāύ-āĻā§-āĻāϝāĻŧā§āϏā§āĻ) āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāĻāĻŋ āϏā§āĻ āĻāĻā§āϰā§āϰ āĻĒāϰ⧠āĻŦā§āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋāϰ āĻŽāĻžāϧā§āϝāĻŽ āĻĨā§āĻā§ āĻŦā§āϰāĻŋāϝāĻŧā§ āĻāϏāĻž āĻĒā§āώā§āĻāĻŋ āĻĻā§āϰāĻŦāĻŖāĻā§ āĻŦā§āĻāĻžāϝāĻŧ, āϝāĻž āĻĒā§āύāϰā§āϏāĻā§āĻāĻžāϞāĻŋāϤ āĻšāϝāĻŧ āύāĻžāĨ¤ āϰāĻžāύāĻ āĻĢ EC āĻāĻŦāĻ pH āĻĒāϰā§āϝāĻŦā§āĻā§āώāĻŖ āϰā§āĻ āĻā§āύā§āϰ āĻĒā§āϰāĻā§āϤ āĻ āĻŦāϏā§āĻĨāĻž āĻĒā§āϰāĻāĻžāĻļ āĻāϰā§āĨ¤
āĻŽā§āϞ āϤāĻĨā§āϝ
- Drain-to-waste systems use runoff to flush salt build-up â typically 10â20% runoff per irrigation
- Runoff EC higher than input EC indicates salt accumulation in the medium
- Runoff EC lower than input EC indicates the plant is consuming more nutrients than it receives
- Runoff pH outside 5.5â6.5 signals a root zone chemistry problem requiring correction
- Recirculating systems capture and reuse runoff â less waste but requires regular solution changes
- Coco coir growers typically target 20â30% runoff per feeding to maintain a clean root zone