Hydroponic grow box systems deliver organic plants, herbs, and vegetables using
only grow lights, water and nutrients. Also, growing with a hydroponic system is much
faster than traditional methods. Using a grow box enables growers to harvest
every 30-60 days. If you need help picking out your perfect
hydroponics system, please contact us at
888-HYDRO-81 (888-493-7681) or use our live help system located to the left of
this page.
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Super Closet Deluxe - #1
Grow Boxon earth! The "Deluxe" holds 24 -
44 plants. It has won an award as the number 1 selling
hydroponic system for the past 5 years. This deluxe cabinet is by far the
best in quality and production. It also comes with a 3 year
warranty and unlimited tech support.
Contact us & we can help you pick out a hydroponic system.
Select from over 20 hydroponic systems.
Call us 24/7 at 888-HYDRO-81 (888-493-7681)
Hydroponic System Selection Guide
Discount Grow Box Systems Save money with our discount hydroponic
systems. These systems are fully automated, easy to use and
affordable. 2 - 24 plant capabilities. Warranty & tech support
included.
Professional Grow Box Systems Easy to use, top notch quality indoor
gardening systems for the professional grower. Turnkey, plug and play,
& backed with warranty. 20 - 60 plant capabilities.
Commercial Grow Box Systems With a large growing area and
top notch quality 16 gauge steel, the commercial grade indoor
gardening
systems are for enormous yields only. 40-120 plant capabilities.
Build Your Own Grow Box Buiild your own grow
box. We will supply you with everything except the outer frame. If
you are on a budget, building your own grow box is your best option.
Hydroponics
Clone Chambers Cloning has never been easier with our turnkey
clone chambers. Clone plants fast & efficiently with our affordable
cloning systems. Clone chambers produce organic clones.
Hydroponics
Herb Dryers Dry herbs at lightning speed and in high
quantities with any of our herb drying systems. Herb dryers are
affordable, easy to use, and will dry your plants and herbs quickly.
LED Grow Lights
L.E.D grow lights last 10 times longer than HID lights and will
operate for over 50,000 hours without the need to replace costly
bulbs. LED lights produce low heat.
Hydroponics
Best Sellers Buying an indoor garden for
the first time can be confusing. We have arranged our best selling
systems including the Deluxe, the Super-File and other hydroponics
systems.
The Mini Cool Cab indoor
gardening grow box is the best you'll find!
It incorporates both drip feed and ultrasonic technologies for
lightning fast root growth. Each drip nozzle is adjustable so the
water flow can be increased, reduced, or closed off entirely.
There is irrigation tubing to every 3 inch net-pot so each plant
receives constant water flow.
Hydroponics Cabinet Flowering Growbox
TheMini Cool Cab
is a fully
automated grow box hydroponics system with the same features and lighting as the cool
cab for maximum production. With a user friendly size, this
hydroponics system
will produce large yields. The reflector is cool enough to
let plants grow around it. Being lightweight and compact, this
hydroponics system is perfect for any home. With the Mini Cool Cab, your growing
with be easy, high yielding, and above all safe. As with all of our
automated, turn-key hydroponic systems, the Mini Cool Cab will plug
into any standard US outlet.
Dimensions: 42" tall x 36" wide x 18" deep
Lockable doors
14 plant capacity
Light-proof Mylar interior doesn't act as an eye-sore
Our custom made interiors have a 99% reflective surface for
maximum light absorption by the plants.
Includes ventilation system with over 500 CFM!
Grows 9-14lbs. of dried plant matter per year
What is hydroponics?
The word, Hydroponic, comes from Latin and means working
water. Simply put, it is the art of growing plants without soil.
When most people think of hydroponics, they think of plants
grown with their roots suspended directly into water with no
growing medium. This is just one type of hydroponic gardening
known as N.F.T. (nutrient film technique). There are several
variations of N.F.T. used around the world and it is a very
popular method of growing hydroponically. What most people don't
realize is that there are countless methods and variations of
hydroponic gardening. In this section, we explain the most
common, including the pros and cons of each along with an
abundance of great, general information about hydroponics.
Basic Hydroponic Systems and How They Work
There are 6 basic types of hydroponic systems; Wick,
Water Culture, Ebb and Flow (Flood &
Drain), Drip (recovery or non-recovery),
N.F.T. (Nutrient Film Technique) and
Aeroponic. There are hundreds of variations on these
basic types of systems, but all hydroponic methods are a
variation (or combination) of these six. Scroll down this page
(or click on the system names) to see drawings and a description
of each type of hydroponic system.
The Wick system is by far the simplest type of hydroponic
system. This is a passive system, which means there are no
moving parts. The nutrient solution is drawn into the growing
medium from the reservoir with a wick. Free plans for a simple
wick system are available (click here for plans).
This system can use a variety of growing medium. Perlite,
Vermiculite, Pro-Mix and Coconut Fiber are among the most
popular.
The biggest draw back of this system is that plants that are
large or use large amounts of water may use up the nutrient
solution faster than the wick(s) can supply it.
The water culture system is the simplest of all active
hydroponic systems. The platform that holds the plants is
usually made of Styrofoam and floats directly on the nutrient
solution. An air pump supplies air to the air stone that bubbles
the nutrient solution and supplies oxygen to the roots of the
plants.
Water culture is the system of choice for growing leaf
lettuce, which are fast growing water loving plants, making them
an ideal choice for this type of hydroponic system. Very few
plants other than lettuce will do well in this type of system.
This type of hydroponic system is great for the classroom and
is popular with teachers. A very inexpensive system can be made
out of an old aquarium or other water tight container. We have
free plans and instructions for a simply water culture system.
The biggest draw back of this kind of system is that it
doesn't work well with large plants or with long-term plants.
The
Ebb and Flow system works by temporarily flooding the grow tray
with nutrient solution and then draining the solution back into
the reservoir. This action is normally done with a submerged
pump that is connected to a timer.
When the timer turns the pump on nutrient solution is pumped
into the grow tray. When the timer shuts the pump off the
nutrient solution flows back into the reservoir. The Timer is
set to come on several times a day, depending on the size and
type of plants, temperature and humidity and the type of growing
medium used.
The Ebb & Flow is a versatile system that can be used with a
variety of growing mediums. The entire grow tray can be filled
with Grow Rocks, gravel or granular Rockwool. Many people like
to use individual pots filled with growing medium, this makes it
easier to move plants around or even move them in or out of the
system. The main disadvantage of this type of system is that
with some types of growing medium (Gravel, Growrocks, Perlite),
there is a vulnerability to power outages as well as pump and
timer failures. The roots can dry out quickly when the watering
cycles are interrupted. This problem can be relieved somewhat by
using growing media that retains more water (Rockwool,
Vermiculite, coconut fiber or a good soiless mix like Pro-mix or
Faffard's).
Drip
systems are probably the most widely used type of hydroponic
system in the world. Operation is simple, a timer controls a
submersed pump. The timer turns the pump on and nutrient
solution is dripped onto the base of each plant by a small drip
line. In a Recovery Drip System the excess nutrient solution
that runs off is collected back in the reservoir for re-use. The
Non-Recovery System does not collect the run off.
A recovery system uses nutrient solution a bit more
efficiently, as excess solution is reused, this also allows for
the use of a more inexpensive timer because a recovery system
doesn't require precise control of the watering cycles. The
non-recovery system needs to have a more precise timer so that
watering cycles can be adjusted to insure that the plants get
enough nutrient solution and the runoff is kept to a minimum.
The non-recovery system requires less maintenance due to the
fact that the excess nutrient solution isn't recycled back into
the reservoir, so the nutrient strength and pH of the reservoir
will not vary. This means that you can fill the reservoir with
pH adjusted nutrient solution and then forget it until you need
to mix more. A recovery system can have large shifts in the pH
and nutrient strength levels that require periodic checking and
adjusting.
This is the kind of hydroponic system most
people think of when they think about hydroponics. N.F.T.
systems have a constant flow of nutrient solution so no timer
required for the submersible pump. The nutrient solution is
pumped into the growing tray (usually a tube) and flows over the
roots of the plants, and then drains back into the reservoir.
There is usually no growing medium used other than air, which
saves the expense of replacing the growing medium after every
crop. Normally the plant is supported in a small plastic basket
with the roots dangling into the nutrient solution.
N.F.T. systems are very susceptible to power outages and pump
failures. The roots dry out very rapidly when the flow of
nutrient solution is interrupted.
The aeroponic system is probably the most
high-tech type of hydroponic gardening. Like the N.F.T. system
above the growing medium is primarily air. The roots hang in the
air and are misted with nutrient solution. The mistings are
usually done every few minutes. Because the roots are exposed to
the air like the N.F.T. system, the roots will dry out rapidly
if the misting cycles are interrupted.
A timer controls the nutrient pump much like
other types of hydroponic systems, except the aeroponic system
needs a short cycle timer that runs the pump for a few seconds
every couple of minutes.
What is the difference between hydroponic, organic
and "regular" fertilizers?
Both hydroponic fertilizers and those intended for use in soil
contain the three major nutrients, nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium.
The major difference in hydroponic fertilizers is that they contain the
proper amounts of all the essential micro-nutrients which fertilizers
intended for use with soil do not. The plants are expected to find these
elements in the soil, assuming that the trace elements are in fact
present. Problems can arise for the plants if any or all of the
micro-nutrients are not present in the soil or are depleted by
successive (or excessive) plantings. Hydroponic fertilizers are usually
in a more refined form with fewer impurities making them both more
stable and soluble for better absorption. Organic fertilizers, in most
cases, are very different than either hydroponic or soil fertilizers
both in composition and how they deliver the nutrient to the plants.
Organic fertilizers rely on the synergistic action of bacteria and
microbes to break down nutritional substances for easier uptake by the
plants. Hydroponic and soil fertilizers provide nutrients in a
ready-to-use form. While once, they were mutually exclusive, in recent
years a number of outstanding organic fertilizers have hit the market in
formulations refined enough for use in hydroponics.
How complicated is hydroponic gardening?
It can be but it doesn't have to be. Hydroponics can be as incredibly
simple as growing a single plant in a hand watered bucket or nursery
pot, using any number of inert growing mediums. No automation,
electricity or grow lights required.
Of course, the potential to go high tech is limited only by your
imagination and budget. Virtually every aspect of garden management can
be automated and should you so desire, monitored and controlled with
your laptop or cell phone from the other side of the world. Dare to
dream.
Most hobby oriented hydroponic systems are somewhere between the two
extremes mentioned above. The average, home hydroponic system usually
consists of a few basic parts: a growing tray, a reservoir, a
submersible pump to water the plants, a simple timer and an air pump and
air stone to oxygenate the nutrient solution. Of course, light (either
natural or artificial) is also required.