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Most growers check their nutrient EC at the reservoir and assume that number is what the plants receive. But in reality, the medium shifts that EC constantly. This hidden change—called EC drift—is one of the most common causes of mystery deficiencies, burned tips, uneven growth, and inconsistent yields.
EC drift is the difference between the electrical conductivity (EC) of your input feed and the EC inside the growing medium after irrigation. The medium doesn’t simply “hold” nutrients—it actively changes them.
This means you can feed at 2.0 EC but your root zone may be sitting at 2.5, 3.0, or even higher depending on drying cycles, plant uptake, and the medium’s chemistry. That hidden shift is where most nutrient problems begin.
Every growing medium interacts with water, nutrients, and salts differently. As the medium dries and rehydrates, salts accumulate, flush out, buffer, or bind to surfaces.
EC drift occurs because:
When EC drifts upward, plants experience subtle toxicity. When EC drifts downward, the plant starves even if you're feeding “correctly.”
EC drift doesn’t always cause immediate symptoms. It often builds quietly over several weeks until the room becomes a patchwork of different deficiencies and stress responses.
High root-zone EC causes:
Low root-zone EC causes:
Most “random” deficiencies in cannabis grows are actually EC drift showing itself.
The easiest way to detect EC drift is by comparing:
Ideally, your runoff EC should be close to your feed EC. If it’s wildly higher or lower, you know the medium is altering nutrient levels in ways your plants feel long before you see symptoms.
Catching drift early prevents weeks of hidden stress.
Coco naturally holds onto calcium and magnesium while releasing potassium. This creates drift if growers don’t compensate with proper Ca/Mg supplementation and dry-back timing.
Rockwool doesn’t bind nutrients, but it magnifies drift through rapid dry-backs. If dry-backs run too deep, EC spikes extremely fast.
Soil buffers EC heavily, often hiding drift for long periods. Problems show up later but hit harder.
Peat/perlite mixes can swing depending on irrigation frequency — overwatering reduces flushing, underwatering produces salt spikes.
Most commercial cultivators don’t try to eliminate drift — they manage it to stay inside an acceptable range.
Even checking twice a week reveals patterns quickly.
Wildly different dry-back depths → wildly different EC in each pot.
A slight increase in runoff volume washes out old salts without drowning the medium.
Many EC spikes come from feeding too late or too early in the light cycle.
A controlled flush can restore balance — but only when necessary.
Moisture readings reveal whether EC drift is caused by uneven dry-back or uneven water retention.
EC drift doesn’t only affect growth — it affects final product quality. Plants with unstable EC produce buds with inconsistent density, terpene expression, and moisture behavior during drying.
Stable root-zone EC sets up a smoother drying curve, which helps reduce mold risk and curing issues after harvest.
EC drift is one of the least understood yet most important parts of cannabis cultivation. Once growers track the difference between what they feed and what the root zone actually experiences, their plants become more uniform, more resilient, and more predictable from batch to batch.
Control EC drift and your entire grow becomes more consistent.
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