Turn dry coir into a balanced growing base. Avoid hot salts with smart rinsing steps. Measure, mix, and export recipes before you soak again.
| Scenario | Coir (L) | Soak ratio | Targets (Ca/Mg ppm) | Start → Target EC | Typical output highlights |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bagged coco, moderate salts | 50 | 1.2 | 150 / 50 | 1.5 → 0.6 | ~60 L solution, salts recipe, 2–5 rinses |
| Washed coco, light adjustment | 30 | 1.0 | 120 / 40 | 0.9 → 0.6 | ~30 L solution, fewer rinses, quicker prep |
| Compressed block, heavy rinse needed | 70 | 1.3 | 180 / 60 | 2.5 → 0.8 | ~91 L solution, more rinse water, re-check runoff |
Coco coir commonly carries potassium and sodium that can displace early calcium and magnesium. Buffering aims to pre-load exchange sites so the first weeks of feeding remain stable. A practical rinse goal is runoff EC trending toward your target, often 0.6–1.0 mS/cm for prepped coir, depending on crop and nutrient program.
The rinse estimator uses a reduction factor to approximate how each rinse lowers soluble salts: ECafter = ECstart × factorrinses. If your factor is 0.60, two rinses leave about 36% of the original soluble load. Measure your source water EC; very hard water can slow apparent EC drop and requires real runoff checks.
Soak volume controls how evenly the buffer contacts the fiber. The calculator uses solution_L = coir_L × soak_ratio. Many growers target 1.0–1.5 L solution per liter of expanded coir, with a soak time near 6–12 hours. Drain thoroughly afterward (15–30 minutes) to reduce waterlogging and improve oxygen availability.
Element targets are set in ppm, then converted to grams of salts. Calcium nitrate is estimated at 19% Ca (tetrahydrate) or 24% Ca (anhydrous). Epsom salt is estimated at 9.86% Mg. Mix salts fully before adding coir, and avoid combining concentrated solutions in one spot.
| Example | Coir | Solution | Ca/Mg | Calcium nitrate | Epsom salt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard prep | 50 L | 60 L | 150/50 ppm | ~47.4 g | ~30.4 g |
Record coir source, starting EC, final runoff EC, and the exact soak recipe. The CSV/PDF exports act as a mix sheet so staff can repeat the same method across batches. If results drift, adjust rinse count or targets in small steps, then validate with runoff readings before scaling up.
Use 0.06–0.12 kg/L as a working range. Start with 0.08 kg/L, run one batch, then refine using the actual expanded volume you observe from your product.
This tool uses EC in mS/cm. PPM conversions vary by meter scale, so compare readings in EC for consistency, especially when targeting a rinse endpoint.
Many setups use roughly 120–180 ppm Ca and 40–60 ppm Mg in the soak solution. Match targets to your nutrient line and local water, then confirm with plant response.
Start at 0.60 for “average” rinsing. If your runoff EC barely drops, use 0.75–0.85. If heavy rinsing drops EC quickly, try 0.45–0.55. Validate with real runoff readings.
Yes. Enter your product’s recommended mL/L for coco prep or buffering. Liquid products differ in strength, so the calculator totals volume, but the label remains the final authority.
Reusing is possible for the same batch type, but concentrations drift as coir exchanges ions. For predictable results, mix fresh solution or measure EC and adjust before reuse.
Store damp coco covered and clean, ideally 24–72 hours. For longer storage, avoid standing water, keep it aerated, and re-check odor and runoff EC before use.
This calculator estimates solution volume, buffering salts, and rinse water using straightforward concentration math.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.