Phylex
PICK YOUR OWN
I remember thinking the cheap TDS was on the 0.5 scale when I tried finding information on it awhile back. It was cheap and it didn't come with many details. But the readings started getting wonky lately which prompted me to upgrade it. After measuring with the Bluelab (set to the 0.5 scale), and seeing the discrepancy in readings between the two, I eventually assumed the cheap TDS meter might have actually been on the 0.7 scale. But I never referenced a chart like the one you provided. I was actually starting to think the numbers would have been the opposite between the two scales. So after seeing that chart, the cheap TDS meter must be out of calibration and not measuring correctly.Looking through, the first thing that jumps out is the change in TDS meter. There are different scales of measurement that are used. So TDS meters can be either 0.5 or 0.7 scale. Your meters may be measuring at different scales giving you the discrepancy between the two measurements. If you backed off of your feeding, this issue may just be a couple of light meals.
Thankfully I don't think I've nearly reached the "out of control" arena and they should be easily manageable. I'm certain the "root" of my issues is PH and uptake as many of you awesome folks have suggested.If these are fungus gnats, you would need to have an out of control population to cause widespread uptake issues (they like eating fungus and decaying matter).
This is a great preventative tip! I actually went back through your thread yesterday or the day before seeking the post where you explained your preventative concoction and re-read it. At the time I was worried they might be root aphids. I'm a little more at ease now leaning toward fungus gnats.I always mix mosquito bits or mosquito dunk product with my soil and refresh every so often to keep fungus gnats controlled.
I appreciate your feedback along with everyone else. Neglect, while even sometimes being out of our control, can creep up quick and bite us in the rear. I certainly need to get the PH corrected. I'm sure a good PH balanced, plain watering is in order. I blasted them with two, heavy, full strength feedings of Mega Crop the last two watering cycles. There's definitely more than enough, and more then likely too much in there now. A good leaching to clear some out and unlocking that lock out should put me back on track in a week or so. When the sticky traps come today, I'll put them in the tent. I'll also run by the store for some DE and top coat the pots. I'll take a look for some of those mosquito dunk products while I'm there.Given the 3 suspects: possible ppm misread, water source pH fluctuation, and possible pest (most likely fungus gnats), I would:Check the pH scale used for your meters to get an idea of what concentration you were feeding.
Check to make sure which pest you're dealing with considering the pics and few descriptions. If you conclude fungus gnats, get a product similar to the mosquito bits to spread and water in to your top soil (with the correct feed and pH range).
Thanks Schwaggy, Jesse, Baja, and CW.