💊 Nutrients ⭐ intermediate

Plan reservoir changes in the hydro correctly

Plan reservoir changes in the hydro correctly – GrowPilot.guide

How often you completely change the nutrient solution in the hydro reservoir, how to recognize the right time and how to control transitions between growth phases.

## Introduction


In hydro cultivation, it is not only the **correct mixing** of the nutrient solution that determines success, but also **when the solution is completely replaced**. This issue is often underestimated: even if pH and EC still look acceptable in the short term, the **ratio of individual nutrients** in the reservoir may already have shifted significantly. Cannabis does not absorb nutrients evenly. Some ions are used up more quickly, others remain behind and accumulate relatively.


A planned reservoir change therefore prevents creeping imbalances, reduces the risk of **nutrient antagonisms** and ensures that the plant receives a suitable nutrient profile again in every phase.


## Why a complete reservoir change is necessary


When refilling with water or nutrient solution, volume is replaced, but the **original composition** is not automatically restored. Over time, this changes:


- the ratio of **nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium**

- the availability of **calcium and magnesium**

- the concentration of individual **micronutrients**

- the total amount of dissolved salts in relation to the actual intake


A complete change is therefore not a luxury, but a tool to restore the nutrient supply to a defined starting point.


## How to recognize that a change is due


Don't just rely on a single measured value. The decisive factor is the **development over several days**.


### Typical indications


- **EC increases** although the plants absorb water: More salts remain than are consumed.

- **EC falls sharply**, although fertilization has already reached the target value: The plants are drawing nutrients very actively, the profile shifts quickly.

- pH drifts unusually strongly every day** despite correction.

- The reservoir was only refilled several times without being completely replaced.

- A **phase change** is imminent, for example from vegetation to flowering.


### Practical rule for intervals


A complete reservoir change often makes sense in the hobby sector:


- **small reservoirs:** rather every 5-7 days

- Larger, stable systems:** often every 7-14 days


This is not a rigid law. Small quantities of water chemically tip out of balance more quickly than large ones.


## Plan reservoir changes by phase


### Young plants and early vegetation


In this phase, nutrient consumption is still moderate. The solution often remains stable for longer if the reservoir is large enough. Nevertheless, it should not be topped up for too long because young plants react sensitively to unbalanced conditions.


It makes sense here:


- run rather **mild EC values**

- Avoid small corrections and instead make clean new additions

- If the measured values are unstable, it is better to change earlier


### Vigorous vegetation


Uptake increases significantly as leaf and root mass increases. Now ratios can shift more quickly, especially for **nitrate, potassium, calcium and magnesium**. A regular complete change keeps the supply precise.


Pay particular attention to:


- more fluctuating EC

- more frequent water consumption

- the need to keep the vegetative nutrient profile constant


### Flowering phase


In the flowering phase, a clean change is particularly important because the requirements change in relation to the vegetation. This applies above all to:


- **less nitrogen** than during vegetation

- relatively higher weight of **phosphorus and potassium**

- continued sufficient supply of **calcium, magnesium and micronutrients**


A reservoir with an old vegetative profile should not simply continue to run. At the start of flowering, a **complete replacement** is the clean solution.


## How to proceed properly


### 1. know the starting water


Make a note before each preparation:


- EC of the raw water

- Relevant special features such as soft or hard water


This is the only way you can judge how much the nutrient solution has really changed later.


### 2. prepare the fresh solution completely


After emptying, prepare a new nutrient solution with the **appropriate profile** for the current phase. Use a realistic target EC for plant age, genetics and system size as a guide.


### 3. do not "blindly top up"


If a reservoir has been corrected several times, a point is reached at which readjustment becomes less accurate than a complete new batch. This is especially true after several days of significant EC or pH drift.


### 4. consciously control transitions


When changing from vegetation to flowering, not only should the light schedule be adjusted for photoperiodic plants, but above all the **nutrient solution**. With **autoflowers**, the changeover is also made according to the stage of development, not because of a 12/12 cycle.


## Common mistakes


- Only adding water for too long

- Using EC as the only benchmark

- Taking the old vegetative nutrient profile into flowering

- Do not completely restart after strong fluctuations

- Treat reservoirs that are too small like large systems


## Conclusion


A planned reservoir change is a central part of nutrient management in hydro cultivation. It prevents creeping imbalances from building up in the ratio of individual nutrients. Those who evaluate **trends in EC, pH, water consumption and phase** together do not change according to feeling, but with a system. This ensures a more even supply and reduces avoidable nutritional problems throughout the cycle.


## Pro Tips

- Small reservoirs usually require shorter replacement intervals.

- Always evaluate the trend of EC and pH, not just individual values.

- After several corrections, replanting is often more precise than re-fertilizing.

- Replace the nutrient solution completely at the start of flowering.

- Convert autoflower according to development stage, not according to 12/12.

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