Why You Need a 3D Printed Hydroponic Garden

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 21. 08. 2024
  • Modular Hydroponic Tower Files: www.printables...
    Complete list of parts and 3d models used to create your own Hydroponic Tower: kit.co/AllYour...
    Today i'm putting together a 3d printed modular hydroponic tower garden. It's an exciting print, and just in time to get your backyard garden ready for summer.
    Below you will find all of the parts used so you can get started building your own.
    Hydroponics tower 3d printer files: www.printables...
    5 Gallon bucket adapter files: www.thingivers...
    The lid uses 18 M3x6 bolts and nuts to fasten everything together.
    General Hydroponics Maxigro and Maxibloom Fertilizer: geni.us/BI1hrD
    VIVOSUN pH and TDS Meter Combo: geni.us/ZB8V
    General Hydroponics pH Control Kit: geni.us/0N8XhRP
    Rockwool Grow Cubes: geni.us/bKYaVm
    3000 Pre-Fed Live Ladybugs: geni.us/8u8z
    Infinite repeat cycle timer plug: geni.us/oAtH
    VIVOSUN 800GPH Submersible Pump: geni.us/y8krA
    3/8" ID 1/2" OD Clear Vinyl Tubing-25 Ft: geni.us/VgmElP
    5 gallon bucket: geni.us/UIAAhJl
    OVERTURE PETG Filament: geni.us/g1sC
    đŸ–šïž My 3D Printing Gear: kit.co/AllYour...

Komentáƙe • 496

  • @cynthiaevemoon
    @cynthiaevemoon Pƙed rokem +7

    This is so much cooler and nicer than the $1K Tower Garden I used to have (and I LOVED that thing!)

  • @remka2000
    @remka2000 Pƙed 3 lety +33

    I need to try this! I would probably not put peppers (or tomatoes) in this since they tend to have massive root bowls. Should be perfect for leafy greens like lettuce, spinach, maybe strawberries and herbs too.

    • @AndrewMurphy8383
      @AndrewMurphy8383 Pƙed rokem +5

      i have put my peppers and tomatoes in those

    • @dontbanmebrodontbanme5403
      @dontbanmebrodontbanme5403 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      Many people put tomatoes and even vining veggies, like cucumbers in them. Even grow them indoors. The work fine.

  • @latriciacagle4873
    @latriciacagle4873 Pƙed rokem +21

    Impressive system. đŸ‘đŸ» I understand the focus of this channel is probably the 3D printing technology and that provides a different level of satisfaction on any project. However, I accomplished the same end result with an inexpensive stacking tower garden, a pump, tubing (that I have leftover from my outdoor drip irrigation system) and an inexpensive container for a reservoir.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +6

      I’m excited about any creative solution to a problem. That sounds like an awesome project! Great job!

    • @Hydro3D
      @Hydro3D Pƙed rokem +1

      I too can see it would cost me about $160 NZD to print and build but I think getting PVC pipe and creating a tower of a similar diameter and height as this would quite likely cost around the same don't you think?

    • @teleclast
      @teleclast Pƙed rokem

      @@Hydro3D There are very few options that are going to be that much cheaper, mainly they would involve PVC and heating it up to bend it to fit the pots.

    • @kolobkolobkolobkolob
      @kolobkolobkolobkolob Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      Depends. 4" wide schedule 40 white pipe from Home Depot and other places gone up in price but does come in 10 ft sections and scedule40 safe for hydroponics. Using food safe glue makes it all possible and practical if going that route.

  • @choicecarter
    @choicecarter Pƙed 3 lety +9

    Thanks man. I started this same print last week. There are not a lot of good videos on this model. Thank you again.

  • @mindsofgreatness
    @mindsofgreatness Pƙed 3 lety +9

    As far as nutrients go, seaweed concentrate is all you would really need. If extra nutrients are needed you can buy mung beans for pennies on the dollar sprout them until the tail is 2x the size of the body, blend them up and strain out the pulp and mix into the water too aka Sprouted Seed Tea

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed 3 lety +4

      I'm 100% going to give this a shot. Love the idea of using seaweed as the fertilizer. I wonder if my saltwater aquarium could actually export enough nutrients to fuel the growth.

    • @joselopez633
      @joselopez633 Pƙed rokem +1

      ​@@ALLYOURTECH3DPwhat in the saltwater aquarium would you add to the hydroponic tower? What's in the skimmer?

  • @DDCRExposed
    @DDCRExposed Pƙed rokem +7

    This is quite a nice system. I made one many years ago that doesn't hold the water nearly as nicely as this one does. I've also been on the fence about buying a 3D printer but I finally have a reason to get into printing! Thanks a bunch for the video and I'll certainly be coming back to this when the time comes to print.

  • @Andreas-gh6is
    @Andreas-gh6is Pƙed rokem +4

    If you don't want to put screws everywhere, just use a soldering iron around 200°C to fuse the parts. Actually works better than screws and most glues, works on any 3D printed material.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      great tip. I've done that, and also use a 3d printing pen.

    • @Sarge92
      @Sarge92 Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP abs can also be welded using acetone

    • @tin2001
      @tin2001 Pƙed rokem

      Just don't use a soldering iron tip you want to use for actual soldering. Burnt plastic is hard to properly clean off and it causes all sorts of problems for solder.

  • @sidekick3rida
    @sidekick3rida Pƙed rokem +3

    Nice design. I would've made parts that fit standard pvc pipe instead of printing the entire setup. Also would be nice to add zip tie mounting points to support larger plants.

  • @lairedejohannes6618
    @lairedejohannes6618 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing a link for the base. The timer you showed is a good idea. Think short cycles, a few minutes on, a few minutes off.

  • @BotanicalOdyssey
    @BotanicalOdyssey Pƙed 3 lety +5

    Can't wait to see the follow up video! I'm in the process of researching 3d printed hydroponics :)

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed 3 lety +4

      Coming soon! I've already learned quite a bit (water PH matters). I'll give it a few more days of growing and follow up.

    • @religionisapoison2413
      @religionisapoison2413 Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP do you use stainless steel nozzle to print? Brass releases lead into the print (which absorbs a lot into root vegetables, slightly less into leafy greens, less for fruiting veggies)

  • @IlfStoyanov
    @IlfStoyanov Pƙed rokem +1

    CZcams randomly proposed this to me, and it is a great idea, but just a small note on the filament. You should use a filament that is food-safe and you should make sure that you print it in such a way that you don't end up with toxic microplastics in your food. That is if you plan to use what you are about to grow for eating. If it is decorative, you can print from whatever can withstand water and UV light.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      Great call out. In my case I only use food grade PETG for my prints like these.

    • @IlfStoyanov
      @IlfStoyanov Pƙed rokem

      ​@@ALLYOURTECH3DP As long as it's food safe, you shouldn't have any problems. I checked some of your other videos and you seem to print mostly of PETG, so you should be safe, but this is mostly for anyone else who might decide to print from ABS or any other material. Maybe you should mention it in further update videos so people can be safe too. Btw, if someone doesn't want to spend money on PETG, but wants food safe filament, DIY approach works too. Plastic bottles from PET - water, milk, whatever consumable food/beverage comes into such a container (in Europe it's quite a lot) can be turned into a filament. There are great tutorials how to create your own filament on YT, so it can be also a good engineering project, along with the gardening one. Love the videos, especially the fact that you seem to focus more on printing practical stuff, especially around gardening and plants.

  • @uturnski
    @uturnski Pƙed 2 lety +1

    The whole reason why I picked up a 3D printer.... ;) Thank you!

    • @kolobkolobkolobkolob
      @kolobkolobkolobkolob Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      What printer u end up getting and how did it go printing this system up.

  • @LindaMcEnernybeth
    @LindaMcEnernybeth Pƙed rokem

    My son printed this for me for Christmas . . . was super excited and it went together well. We mounted it on top of a 30 gal blue barrel for more reservoir and weight. Unfortunately a month of daily 115 F summers here in Arizona destroyed it before we got any produce. Trying again using PVC pipe and heatgun formed pockets by another tower builder site. It was really cool - until it disintegrated.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      What filament type did you print it out of? PLA will definitely melt and deform at those temperatures. I always use PETG for anything outdoor in the summer heat. Nylon would be another option as well.

    • @LindaMcEnernybeth
      @LindaMcEnernybeth Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP we used PETG as recommended - the other thing was each set of netcup holders printed out with the perforated water distribution plate on the bottom of each section. This caused each section to quickly become root bound, clogging the water flow and leaking water at each connection. I don't know why - he downloaded the files you provided but I see in the video that yours were printed open except for the hose guide. Was there a correction to the print that we missed?

  • @makouille495
    @makouille495 Pƙed rokem +2

    just found out your channel and the content is quality ! keep it up ! thx

  • @JonathanLawrenceMitchell
    @JonathanLawrenceMitchell Pƙed rokem +2

    First off, I'm a huge fan of modular design and prototyping with 3d printing. I love this. The only suggestion I'd offer, to spare yourself the time overhead and economic cost in manufacturing, is to think of the 3d printer as a prototyping solution, not the actual production solution.
    What you have is the ability to create silicone molds of the 3d prints into which you'd subsequently cast polyurethane resin, over and over again as desired, to create the final products. In most cases, we're talking about the ability to create a fully-cured, ready-to-use part in under an hour (depending upon your chosen resin), as opposed to waiting for hours or days for a 3d print job to complete. You're also mitigating the dreaded failed print by relying far less on the printer for outcomes. As well, resin casting will always be less economically costly by volume so you're not only producing more in the same time frame, you're doing it at a fraction of the cost.

    • @michaelrussell3677
      @michaelrussell3677 Pƙed rokem

      You gonna do it for us?

    • @alexzanderroberts995
      @alexzanderroberts995 Pƙed rokem +1

      ​@@michaelrussell3677 do it yourself? There is as many CZcams videos explain how to silicon cast as there is about 3d printing

    • @ElizabethGreene
      @ElizabethGreene Pƙed rokem +1

      How does that make sense economically? It'll cost me $60 in Mold max 20 to make a mold for one of the tower pieces. That mold will take 24 hours to cure, and then I can pull about one part an hour out of it. The parts have thin sections, so I demolding them without derping the mold is going to be fidgety. Not impossible, but it's not an easy first project.
      The real problem with this model is it's not designed for fast printing. I played with it in fusion and by simplifying the geometry it's pretty easy to get this under 4 hours to print. The redesigned part doesn't have as much bed contact so I can knock it off automatically at the end of the print job, so printing a dozen of them would take me two days. Realistically, even with fast curing resin, I can't cast a dozen of them in two days with one mold.

    • @JonathanLawrenceMitchell
      @JonathanLawrenceMitchell Pƙed rokem

      @@ElizabethGreene - At the end of the day, ya just gotta go with what you know works. Personally, I'm all-in on Smooth-On products and have a pretty decent workflow when it comes to mold making and such but I agree, it's definitely costly, especially when not in a production workflow but just creating personal projects.
      Another reason for my considerations was that my printer's not exactly high end so there is definitely a lot of post work to achieve a professional finish with prints. Lots of primer and sanding prior to paint and top coat. It's subjective but I'd trade all that post work for the cost of casting a finished product directly from the mold but, again, that's just subjectivity. And pointless if your printer is actually capable of that level of quality directly.
      I'm working with an old Creality CR-10 and an FLSUN Speed Racer, both of which being at the low end of capabilities. Both are just prototyping machines because, at least with these, it's actually faster and cheaper to process one print for a mold then cast x-amount of parts from that than otherwise. So, when I factor in the cost of sand paper, primer, paint, polyurethane and time invested per print from these older machines, I'm actually coming out ahead in time and economics with Smooth-On.
      Of course, there's also cheating with mold making to the extent that most molds I create are essentially glove molds with various methods of reinforcement to drastically reduce the amount of silicone used, thus significantly lowering the cost of production. I often 3d print mother molds into which I cast silicone negatives. PLA is rigid enough to serve a lot of purposes.
      But, again, if this is for personal use only with no intent to mass produce and market, you're probably as you implied, far better off sticking to the process you're working with than going off the deep end of prototyping molds for prototype parts. :D

    • @ElizabethGreene
      @ElizabethGreene Pƙed rokem +1

      @@JonathanLawrenceMitchell I love the Creality printers. I was at a makerspace that had several.
      The biggest thing people miss is, Imho, 3d printing is not injection molding. These parts specifically were designed to be injection molded, or more likely copied from/inspired by an IM part. If designers step back from the idea that 3d printing should be like IM then things get better. This part would be plenty strong enough if it were two or three perimeter layers thick It doesn't need infill, hollows, or even interior walls.. An IM part needs that extra mass to fill sufficiently and survive ejection, but we don't. That can make the difference between days and hours of printing.
      Love your layer lines. There's nothing wrong with layers.

  • @nathanjohnson83
    @nathanjohnson83 Pƙed rokem +6

    I'd be really curious how that black PETG holds up to sunlight. I know its better than PLA but you should do another video in 6 or 8 mo showing how it all worked.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +3

      It does well. I’ve had black PETG parts in direct sunlight for going on 3 years now with zero warping.

  • @workinprogress5936
    @workinprogress5936 Pƙed rokem

    This is a fantastic idea and I really wish I owned a 3d printer. It is probably overkill, but I would add a locking spinning bracket to the bottom of the bucket so I can rotate the entire planter, this way they can get even amount of sun over all the planters. Again, overkill, but something I would consider.
    Saving this video into my favorite videos for something for me to build.

    • @snuffoutrouge5109
      @snuffoutrouge5109 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      I was investigating 3d printing services is this in the realm of affordable rather than buying a 3d printer ?

  • @JDas2k
    @JDas2k Pƙed rokem

    Thanks for sharing this. I'm going to explore this next year for our herb garden

  • @lineuve
    @lineuve Pƙed rokem +1

    Excellent job, very modular (great Design)

  • @thatonesnowboarde
    @thatonesnowboarde Pƙed rokem +1

    I think I would avoid using white for a few reasons. It contains titanium dioxide which is much harder on your nozzles unless you are using a hardened nozzle. This stuff is used as a whiting agent. I would go with something very dark... Second, water is a solvent so water running down white filament will leach titanium dioxide into the environment as well as into your garden.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Since this video came out I’ve used green for all of my recent versions of this print. Works great, and to be honest, I wasn’t aware of the titanium dioxide use in white PETG, so that you for pointing that out.

    • @thatonesnowboarde
      @thatonesnowboarde Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP I liked printing with white prior to knowing this Slant 3D (printer farm in texas) did a yt video on this a few months ago. The darker the filament the better. Clear is another option as it is void of additives but it also may effect the root system by letting too much light in

  • @andylimb
    @andylimb Pƙed rokem

    I can’t find my original post but I said I would give an update. I printed mine in white Overture PLA. This summer in Texas has been extremely hot. I have had zero issues with my system melting or warping. The water runs 24/7 and sits on my gazebo. It has not been exposed to the extreme sun but does get the daily heat.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      The constant water running through has helped I’m sure. Otherwise PLA would likely deform ina few hours

    • @andylimb
      @andylimb Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP I would think the same. However I printed an anti squirrel shield for my bird feeders with the same PLA and it has not warped at all. Perhaps the white color is helping but I’m impressed so far.

  • @ElDooderino
    @ElDooderino Pƙed rokem

    I bought a 3d printer to print this hydroponic system. why buy a system when i can print it myself.... and then lots of other cool things. The printer will arrive tomorrow. I am very excited!

  • @ericzwirnmann8151
    @ericzwirnmann8151 Pƙed rokem +3

    I would consider a design that integrates standard PVC pipe with 3D printing for the plant holders. Could save a lot of print time and might be sturdier too.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      I've thought about that, and when I priced it out, it was significantly more expensive. I have a pretty fast core xy printer now, so the pieces are cheap, sturdy, and fast top print. That's not going to be the case for everyone though, and for many, PVC is a great alternative. Thanks for the tip!

    • @IvanGreguricOrtolan
      @IvanGreguricOrtolan Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP I don't understand based on which criteria it's cheaper. One of this pieces is probably around 200-250g which at 23kb per KG is around 5 euro per piece. A 2.5m 110mm PVC pipe is about 25 euro, the only way would be that prices in your area highly differ from this.

    • @tin2001
      @tin2001 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@IvanGreguricOrtolan
      Chinese 1KG rolls of filament around $25AU. PVC 100mm X 3m pipe is $25 at Bunnings.... So yep. About 4 times the price to use PETG filament.
      If the holes could he drilled round and the black pot things be designed to fit that round hole and still sit at an angle, it would be about 1/3 of the price.
      Of course this is also an older video, so the prices may have been entirely different at the time.

  • @Franckidoo35
    @Franckidoo35 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    hi, really good video you made. for the pump a 290 gph really does the job . That is what i use on mine :)

  • @GaryMcKinnonUFO
    @GaryMcKinnonUFO Pƙed rokem

    It's faster to make them from plastic piping, but more costly of course. I used the white plastic pipng and a heat gun to bend and make the pockets for the net pots.

  • @palmtree5544
    @palmtree5544 Pƙed rokem +1

    You forgot to mention if you want a tall tower, you must find a pump that has the proper lift. Some pumps have a high gallon/per hour flow, but not enough lift.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      The pump included in the links works for a tower much taller than you could ever physically print.

    • @sethkurtz655
      @sethkurtz655 Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP Challenge accepted!

  • @zundappwatercooler
    @zundappwatercooler Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    The 3-way section i printed on a bambulab x1 carbon in just 3 hours with a 0.6 nozzle and 0.42 layer height

  • @tedo3332
    @tedo3332 Pƙed rokem +1

    Looks like a 6 foot head pump. That means it will pump your 800 gallons 6ft vertical from the pumps location.

  • @tombo7719
    @tombo7719 Pƙed rokem +1

    you could design caps for 4" pvc that could save time. Pretty awesome vert garden dude!

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      Cool idea, I might give that a try. You could use PVC for the separators if nothing else.

    • @tombo7719
      @tombo7719 Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP exactly! Just to speed up the process of it all, cost/time etc. You can get a piece of 4" (I believe) right at 10.00 IIRC (bought some this season for drain)

  • @keithforbes8482
    @keithforbes8482 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Great stuff brethren!

  • @johnosman8971
    @johnosman8971 Pƙed 2 lety

    It will only provide water to each selected plant, so an umbrella top, will be required, so that the top does not need to look like a bridge to no where, if there is a diffuser, (like the head in your bathroom tub/shower), 
 & it must diffuse the water, in a drip methodology, 
 so, incorporating sectional pieces of the shower head options, will greatly insure that each plant gets the desired amount of feed precipitation, to create really great plant growth, 


  • @hydroponikstuttgart4515
    @hydroponikstuttgart4515 Pƙed rokem

    hi, you can print a dispersion nozzle and put it on the end of the tube/pipe to distribute the waterflow more evenly.
    And then put your pump on a timer like 2mins on 10mins off. So the roots will get exposed to some air/o2, and roots love o2

  • @kierancarter3693
    @kierancarter3693 Pƙed rokem +1

    im super interested in this and amazing quality design, i only have pla at the moment unfortunately but will look at investing into some petg i think
    thanks so much

  • @rsomorai
    @rsomorai Pƙed rokem +1

    Amazing video, amazing presentation, thank you so much for this!

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      Wow, thank you! I appreciate the kind words

    • @Stavrossspand
      @Stavrossspand Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      How much did it cost to build it? Thank you very much

  • @VincePolevault
    @VincePolevault Pƙed 2 lety +1

    The like count was at 999 when I got here. Feels good

  • @rpals5412
    @rpals5412 Pƙed rokem

    Very good video, right to the point! Thanks for sharing your experience

  • @justinlwerner
    @justinlwerner Pƙed rokem +1

    Outstanding.

  • @hfmleasing444
    @hfmleasing444 Pƙed rokem

    Hi dear. What a lovely set up. Excellent.
    Where were you all the time? I had been looking for you frantically for years.đŸ˜Šâ€

  • @violettracey
    @violettracey Pƙed rokem +1

    Cool! Thanks for showing this!

  • @Cordelish
    @Cordelish Pƙed 2 lety

    I keep a reef tank, I would recommend hitting a pet store or pet section of a store and getting a pump built for a 55g or 75g tank at max. Since you are going straight up, you could probably get away with just the 55g.

    • @T0tenkampf
      @T0tenkampf Pƙed rokem

      pond pumps typically have higher head pressure, which is what you need for vertical lift. I do actually use DC powered aquarium pumps myself though as they are quiet, energy efficient, variable speed, and have run dry / clogging protection circuits. They are also about $80 though.

  • @dustintinsley3899
    @dustintinsley3899 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

    do this but as an areoponics set up. it would use less water an energy. also you could get away with much cheaper pumps. I guess I need to get the 3D printer going again and build one for the top of my aquarium.

  • @MrGundawindy
    @MrGundawindy Pƙed rokem

    Just for clarification, PLA melting point is usually around 170°C and 180°C. I think you meant that it will reach it's glass transition temperature at about 60°C, which is definitely possible outside in summer.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      It deforms in high outdoor temps.

    • @MrGundawindy
      @MrGundawindy Pƙed rokem

      @@ALLYOURTECH3DP yep, when it exceeds it's glass transition temperature. That's not melting though. That was the clarification.

  • @DC9848
    @DC9848 Pƙed rokem +1

    Perfect, thank you for sharing

  • @patkenney7226
    @patkenney7226 Pƙed rokem +1

    This is an absolutely fantastic design. However, I am curious as to why the original top "cap" had the vents (where the water was splashing out) and not a solid, watertight piece to begin with ?

  • @lazyman1011
    @lazyman1011 Pƙed rokem

    Nice roundup! Thanks!

  • @ilovefunnyamv2nd
    @ilovefunnyamv2nd Pƙed rokem

    that submersible waterpump looks like the same one I got (not that shape and color pallete means anything) and the damn thing shorted to water. One day I started cleaning the bed and plants and didn't realize I was getting shocked until my fingers were numb!
    Anyways, I definitely recommend getting a DC pump instead. even if it fails in the same way, it's a hell of a lot safer

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Oh no! Great tip. I haven't had any issues with either of mine, but that doesn't mean I wont at some point. Thanks for sharing the tip!

  • @barbarastefani254
    @barbarastefani254 Pƙed rokem +1

    Wish I could afford it but it’s out of the question I do love the designs maybe someday I’ll get enough money

  • @markmalonson7531
    @markmalonson7531 Pƙed rokem +1

    Superb!

  • @michaelgraff6978
    @michaelgraff6978 Pƙed rokem

    Printing. I have a lot of spare white PLA, so going to go with that for now. When/if it melts, I'll change to PETG, which is usually my go-to functional material anyway.
    I also plan on sealing the prints somehow, likely food-safe epoxy to coat the inside, which will hopefully prevent "stuff" from coming through the layers.

    • @j.o.p.9270
      @j.o.p.9270 Pƙed rokem +1

      I’ve had 2 pla skulls baking outside in the sun for 2 years now. I can’t tell any difference from when they were first printed

    • @shiftednrifted
      @shiftednrifted Pƙed rokem

      I imagine it will be fine- its water cooled

  • @Kachelator
    @Kachelator Pƙed rokem

    I love the concept of vertical hydroponics, but I tried a very similar design three years ago with a 3D printed tower from PETG. It worked great in the beginning, but after a while (months) it started growing mold and algae (?) because the print wasn't really solid, but had a lot of little cavities. Maybe works better with a 100% infill -- I used less than that. Pump pressure indeed was significant, my tower was around 150 cm high with a fitting pump. Tell me what you think.
    And by the wasy, thanks for the video, I am convinced we should explore these technics

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      I found the color of the tower matters. I ended up printing a green tower and didn't have any algae issue. I do take the tower apart and clean it once a season, otherwise, it has held up well.

  • @Voidroamer
    @Voidroamer Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    i print mine with 100% infill.. only added 20 minutes per piece out of 4 hours. and keeps em from having pockets of stagnant nutrient rich water

  • @DracolegacyOfficial
    @DracolegacyOfficial Pƙed rokem

    adding a tube through the center would optimize this system. just the hose from the pump to the bottom planter section would simplify adding additional segments without re-running the hose.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      There is a tube through the center

    • @Hydro3D
      @Hydro3D Pƙed rokem

      Nice idea. Some interlocking bits with o rings and a tube through the center. Could even use the existing tube cut into lengths the same height as the sections, and a mating mechanism between each section!

  • @markrumrey790
    @markrumrey790 Pƙed rokem +1

    Great Video! The only thing I would recommend is changing out the black cups to white as the Black will get really hot and can burn the plant's roots.

  • @TamilLatest
    @TamilLatest Pƙed 3 lety

    Looking forward to the follow up!

  • @barbarastefani254
    @barbarastefani254 Pƙed rokem +1

    Love the design

  • @ArtificialDNA
    @ArtificialDNA Pƙed rokem +1

    additional idea // why not make an adaptor for like fish tank. 55GL fish tank is cheap and you can raise fish and grow plants also save on fertilizer .. i dont know just idea ..

  • @Ryan-ik2mk
    @Ryan-ik2mk Pƙed rokem

    “Other plants like mars
 and 
 mars” đŸ€Ż

  • @OmegaCreationsChannel
    @OmegaCreationsChannel Pƙed rokem +1

    11:40 layerhight doesn't affect the amount of filament you use dude. but wallthicknes does for example and the amount of infill. hope this helps.

  • @LindaMcEnernybeth
    @LindaMcEnernybeth Pƙed rokem +1

    Really need a larger reservoir or a pressure compensating constant/intermittent water source. A few mature plants Will use up that bucket in a day or two?

    • @LindaMcEnernybeth
      @LindaMcEnernybeth Pƙed rokem +1

      From personal experience!

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      When mine are outside I have a drip irrigation line running to the bucket so it gets filled daily. That seems to get the job done, otherwise I agree. On hot days, mid-summer it needs daily refills.

    • @LindaMcEnernybeth
      @LindaMcEnernybeth Pƙed rokem

      ​@@ALLYOURTECH3DP What I will do also- put on existing drip line system.
      What I love is that this system makes it possible for people like me who have limited mobility - can garden from wheelchair!

  • @3dtwerking324
    @3dtwerking324 Pƙed rokem

    I'm not sure I did the math right but 150W pump running 24/7 for 5 months @ $0.25 / kw = 550Kw total for $137.50 power costs for $30 in veggies.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      You only run the pump for 5 minutes every hour, so roughly divide that by 12, and the pump is 24W, not 150, so divide that again by 6. It’s pretty inexpensive. Maybe a couple dollars a year on the high end.

  • @jimrogers7841
    @jimrogers7841 Pƙed 2 lety

    You might have pushed me over the edge to add an FDM printer to the shop!

  • @muuubiee
    @muuubiee Pƙed rokem

    I'd look into possibility of lead contamination. Brass often contain lead, and so all the plastic might pick up on some of that lead.
    This stuff without everything being in stainless steel is definitely not even remotely food safe, but maybe it's good enough for this. You'd also have to look up your filament and it's contents.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      I use diamond nozzles on my printers, so unlikely to be an issue. For the filament, there are several brands of PETG that are food safe. I would select one based on that criteria as you suggested.

  • @joelmwangi456
    @joelmwangi456 Pƙed rokem +1

    Awesome

  • @NemesisOfSelf
    @NemesisOfSelf Pƙed rokem

    FYSA, white filament contains titanium dioxide that acts as an abrasive. Printing enough white filament will widen the nozzle diameter, resulting in printing inconsistencies.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Great call out. I use a diamond nozzle for my prints, so it’s a non-issue, but definitely worth discussing for brass.

  • @Hawk_R6
    @Hawk_R6 Pƙed rokem

    Looks like an Alien-Bong.

  • @friendryan
    @friendryan Pƙed rokem

    I would paint all surfaces with FOOD Contact Expoy Resin. Certified only. This will be acidic water with air flowing on this plastic.

  • @0Logan05
    @0Logan05 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    Some good Ideas..
    Good that You covered Filament types. Leaching is absolutely a Concern and Safe filament is key..Sad that PLA (Bio/Corn derived) is so awful outside(Low melting point/lack of uv resistance/Etc). The Pump actually seems fine(Too much pressure is Better than Not enough as the max/head pressure comes suddenly..Easier on the motor. Mine is Solar and a battery. Few hrs day and night.. (Pretty sure this will never be used on “Other Planets” though😉..( Todays “Science” is uncannily Fictitious.. Sadly Most People can be led to Believe Anything, even “Smart” people..Sigh)
Guess one Cannot find what one is not searching for
 (Academic History and Notions of Theoretical and World Sciences are Not Sound. It’s a lie.)
    Regardless, looks RadđŸ€™đŸ»

  • @vulcan4d
    @vulcan4d Pƙed 3 lety +17

    Sick, I was just about to plan this print after I fine tune my petg settings! I don't get why there are holes on the top unless you want water everywhere :). I'll be interested to see how the tomato plant will grow considering how large it can get.

    • @Grognarthebarb
      @Grognarthebarb Pƙed 2 lety

      How did it work out. Is this a good method for tomatoes?

    • @kbkline1
      @kbkline1 Pƙed rokem

      I'm not sure why there are holes either lol. I'm gonna give this a try myself

    • @karinlovesjedward
      @karinlovesjedward Pƙed rokem +1

      @@kbkline1 Probably so that the roots get enough oxygen, which will make your plants happier :)

    • @moniquehurley5907
      @moniquehurley5907 Pƙed rokem +3

      Pet or petg are not rated food safe. If you check out a farmers almanac, you’ll see that they grow bacteria pretty easily.
      I would go with polypropylene or polyethylene (hdpe or ldpe) if your printer can support it.

  • @MarkSnop
    @MarkSnop Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    great video thanks for everything!!

  • @brad1574
    @brad1574 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Very cool.

  • @cathrynmartin4395
    @cathrynmartin4395 Pƙed rokem +2

    Even a fairly small aquarium pump would work well enough (so long as you don't go more than 5 feet in height or so, but since you are sending the pumped water through a tube, it can be the smaller tubing and will still make it up to the top piece and then drain down nicely. Other than that, I absolutely love this design. Great vertical hydroponic system. I will be making two buckets to grow items inside - I am following the basic structure of the Gardyn system. I am making a rectangular box larger than the bucket sections and zip-tying 4 foot long grow lights to the 4 corner pieces of the stand (made out of PVC pipe) and with everything plugged into a smart multi-outlet fixture on the wall, I can set the pump to circulate for 5 minutes, off for 5 minutes all day long and the lights to be on 16 hours a day. All of it automated. Oh, and I added a nutrient solution level indicator so I don't have to try to see how much is in the bucket. Take a piece of that larger, clear tubing...you might want to 3D print an elbow, but the 90 degree elbow (like the ones used in misting systems) and make a hole LOW on the bucket so the elbow is pushed through a rubber grommet that restricts water coming through the hole you've made and once you mount that tubing and fill the bucket, the tubing will fill with the nutrient water and equalize to what is in the bucket. Easy to see the water level without looking inside!

    • @andy_warb
      @andy_warb Pƙed rokem

      I was thinking of maybe actually running the water from a fish tank through this before it goes into the filter kinda like they do with aquaponics systems (supposedly the fish waste in the water is super good for the plants and helps them grow better!)

    • @cathrynmartin4395
      @cathrynmartin4395 Pƙed rokem

      @@andy_warb You might do some research. Somewhere I read that fish waste "fresh from the tank" can be toxic to plants. Remember, there are underwater plants that evolved to survive with and in an environment of fish waste, but the plants we are talking about are food plants with very specific nutrient requirements. Just a suggestion....

  • @TheLivebaitdrifter
    @TheLivebaitdrifter Pƙed rokem

    You need to print the water deflector that goes on top of the diffuser. That will stop the geyser.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      It’s in there, I had to restrict the water flow as well from the oversized pump. Otherwise it just blows the deflector off

  • @brookestephen
    @brookestephen Pƙed rokem +3

    nice system! Could you combine it with a fish tank to make aquaculture? I am curious about the Tomato plants - will you transfer them to earth, or do you have a 3d template for a support for the long tomato stems?

    • @ArtificialDNA
      @ArtificialDNA Pƙed rokem +1

      i just saw ur comments yes i was thinking same thing at less if not grow fish to eat it reduces use of fertilizer because of fish .. combine 2 in 1 ssytem :) ..

  • @alanshipley6084
    @alanshipley6084 Pƙed 2 lety +2

    I was hoping in your follow-up video for this you could going to some of the settings that you used and maybe recommend a good printer for this as this will be my first printer for me and my son

    • @maxva6245
      @maxva6245 Pƙed rokem +1

      Seriously. How much was it to print each piece?

  • @reginaldburnbridge2217
    @reginaldburnbridge2217 Pƙed rokem +1

    Is there live protein on mars, can we make burgers up there.

  • @mysticalsoulqc
    @mysticalsoulqc Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    Bravo this will help i am preting one also.

  • @solarpunk9994
    @solarpunk9994 Pƙed rokem +1

    Have you thought about using Hemp pla/ filaflex purifier 82a, or olivine pla? The Hemp and olivine filament capture carbon and the filaflex purifies the air

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +2

      I haven't looked at any of those filaments, but thank you for letting me know about them. Sounds like a fun research project!

    • @dougdederich
      @dougdederich Pƙed rokem

      Can you post a link for them?

  • @BHARGAV_GAJJAR
    @BHARGAV_GAJJAR Pƙed rokem

    You don't need pump if you seal bottom and add new water from top.

  • @brianalsum7706
    @brianalsum7706 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    I disagree with you on the mateirals. Use PLA. its more of a food safe bio polymer and if you printed in white, and combined with the fact that its water cooled... melting is not an issue. Avoid colors as the UV will ruin the color pretty quickly

  • @DanOffGridInWyoming
    @DanOffGridInWyoming Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Hey just so you know, standing barefoot on wet concrete is really dangerous if you're anywhere near electricity. Be careful.

  • @heckyes
    @heckyes Pƙed rokem +1

    Isn't the jury still out whether or not it's safe to grow things in PETG?

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      Probably. Some PETG filament is “food safe”, but once printed who knows. You could always add a layer of epoxy if you are concerned though I suppose.

  • @GunXter
    @GunXter Pƙed rokem +1

    I dont like the idea it must be running 24/7 it kind of kill the sustainable aspect. Anyway cool video, thanks for sharing👍

    • @allyourtechai
      @allyourtechai Pƙed rokem +1

      I run it 5 minutes on, 15 minutes off. You can get away with less depending on how hot it is in your area. I just monitor how the plants look and adjust up or down accordingly.

  • @alexanderkramarenko7052
    @alexanderkramarenko7052 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Are you sure that it's good for plants to constantly pour water on the roots in such volumes? From my point of view amount of water should be much lower may be? And this is a pump for clean water, how will it pump water with fertilizers and organic residues?

  • @wsbill14224
    @wsbill14224 Pƙed rokem

    Great idea but you want to make sure your plastic is food grade and good enough to stand up to years of sunlight.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem +1

      PETG is a great choice for this. I’ve had pieces out in the summer heat for going on 5 years now.

  • @lundebc
    @lundebc Pƙed rokem

    You should power the pump with a solar setup!

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Definitely! My home runs on solar + battery, but you could easily set something up for just this setup i'm sure.

  • @Frank-bg4vw
    @Frank-bg4vw Pƙed rokem

    Any one no if someone sales this I don't have a 3D printer and this design looks amazing

  • @Yoursoul101
    @Yoursoul101 Pƙed rokem

    I just cant imagine the plastic from the 3d printer lasting long. That plastic has shown to get very brittle over a few months in the sun.

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Not if you use proper materials. I’m going on my third season for these towers, and I have outdoor lights I 3d printed almost 5 years ago. PETG lasts outdoors no problem. I’m n Colorado we go between 100+ days to negative 17.

  • @mooctopia123
    @mooctopia123 Pƙed rokem +2

    Hi this is pretty cool, so I have an idea. Since you are 3D print the modular tower, what do you think about printing them with a small 1/4 inch internal reserver? Every time the pump turns on it would water the plants and refresh these reservoirs for each openings. I realize that it doesn't cost that much for electricity and it's not a big deal, but maybe theses small reservoirs would be sort of a backup for power outage. Maybe also you wouldn't have to run the pump that often as well. What do you think?

  • @carsonvogt3297
    @carsonvogt3297 Pƙed 3 lety

    Awesome, definitely hoping to see a followup. I assume it's a relatively small variety of tomato you've put in?

  • @sherryreese3576
    @sherryreese3576 Pƙed rokem

    The plastic particles in your food are strong with this one.

  • @fritter63
    @fritter63 Pƙed rokem

    Should modify the design to fit over OTS 4" PVC pipe for the straight sections .Mucho cheaper to cut lengths to whatever you need.

  • @mattomjohn4314
    @mattomjohn4314 Pƙed rokem +1

    Neat! Looking forward to trying this. Thoughts on using PP filament?

    • @DalXe.
      @DalXe. Pƙed rokem

      Better because less chance of micro plastics

  • @IDreamInMini
    @IDreamInMini Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    I absolutely love this whole system. However, I finished putting together the lid yesterday and it won't fit on my bucket 😱 Has this happened to anyone else?

  • @Moona1966
    @Moona1966 Pƙed rokem

    Now to find a reputable solar charger, then you're completely off grid with them!

  • @enima68
    @enima68 Pƙed 2 lety +2

    does the pump work 24/7 or is there a programmable clock if so what is the timing
    does each plant have a different timing?
    thanks a lot

  • @kolobkolobkolobkolob
    @kolobkolobkolobkolob Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Hello. Really enjoy your channel very well done and to the point well done. The pump your using works well but you are correct you can really power down on your pump will be find at a trickle. ALSO would one of these small novice type printers like the Ender 3 V2 suffice at making a few of these or would it burn out fairly quickly. Not in market for commercial printer just something under $500 I could have fun with. Thanks sup vid.

  • @cosplay_reborn7916
    @cosplay_reborn7916 Pƙed rokem +1

    Question đŸ™‹đŸ»â€â™‚ïž does the Water circulate like a water fountain â›Č or is the hose running all the time ?

    • @ALLYOURTECH3DP
      @ALLYOURTECH3DP  Pƙed rokem

      Yes, the water circulates with a pump similar to a fountain.

  • @matthewwilson3673
    @matthewwilson3673 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Fun video!

  • @blockhead3654
    @blockhead3654 Pƙed rokem +1

    Awsome

  • @N-A762
    @N-A762 Pƙed rokem

    microplastics in my food lets goooooo