Hi friends, I know I have asked this issue many times, but in the analysis behind Seachem nitrogen, there are percentages as follows: How many grams of nitrate and how many grams of urea are in a 250ml bottle?
So, it uses 2.5ml 0.92ppm no3 and 0.08ppm no3 equivalent urea in 160 liters, is it true?1.25 g per 250 mL
(1.25 g urea/250 mL solution) x 100 = 0.5% g/mL urea
edit: sorry, you asked about nitrate too. It's twice as much nitrate as urea by mass, since it's 1% and not 0.5%. Note that they are using potassium nitrate here and this only accounts for the nitrate portion of that.
To be precise 10.725g of KNO3 and 4.825g of urea.: How many grams of nitrate and how many grams of urea are in a 250ml bottle?
250 mL başına 1,25 g
(1,25 g üre/250 mL çözelti) x 100 = %0,5 g/mL üre
edit: pardon nitratı da sormuştunuz. Kütle olarak ürenin iki katı nitrattır, çünkü %0,5 değil %1'dir. Burada potasyum nitrat kullandıklarını ve bunun yalnızca nitrat kısmını oluşturduğunu unutmayın.
John friend, now the gram of urea you gave is 4.825, which is 0.14ppm. I calculated it like this: 0.14x2.0649, to convert it to no3, kno3=0.41ppm, 0.28ppm in urea is no3=0.69ppm, or am I calculating it wrong? 0.41+0.28=0.69 is not 1ppm dose. So I want to make a valuable mixture, that's why I'm asking so many questions.To be precise 10.725g of KNO3 and 4.825g of urea.
I think you already asked this question. Just need to divided it by 2.
Post in thread 'Seachem nitrogen clone help' Seachem nitrogen clone help
Like solufeed for example?Math aside, why bother copying Flourish Nitrogen specifically? Seachem wants you to buy all these separate products and that works great for them ($$$), but it's an unnecessary hassle for the user. Now, you can't easily combine everything, but get NPK covered with a single solution at least. There are lots of threads on this if you search.
What @ElleDee says - <"Help with plant care (existing plants)">Math aside, why bother copying Flourish Nitrogen specifically? Seachem wants you to buy all these separate products and that works great for them ($$$), but it's an unnecessary hassle for the user. Now, you can't easily combine everything, but get NPK covered with a single solution at least.
Yes. All potassium (K+) etc. ions <"are the same in solution">.Like solufeed for example?
It was just one that was available in the UK. There will be <"commercial hydroponic fertiliser"> mixes available in every country, it is just a case of finding one without too much in the way of <"TAN (NH3/NH4+)">.I'm in the US and that brand is not available here, so I don't have direct experience with it myself
Unfortunately, solufeed npk is not available in my country, I searched for a brand close to it and could not find it.Solufeed appears to offer popular dry fertilizers you can make a complete fertilizer solution with, yes. And @Happi has already done the math.
(I'm in the US and that brand is not available here, so I don't have direct experience with it myself.)
There will be a company that sells something similar, either a multinational like Yara <"Where we operate | Yara International"> or a more local company <"Water Soluble Fertilizers">.I searched for a brand close to it and could not find it.
14:7:28 npk is it true?Hi all,
There will be a company that sells something similar, either a multinational like Yara <"Where we operate | Yara International"> or a more local company <"Water Soluble Fertilizers">.
cheers Darrel
Because it is a horticultural fertiliser the phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) content will be quoted as oxides.14:7:28 npk is it true?