If you’ve been around hydroponics long enough, you eventually land on LECA. To be honest, I resisted at first. Then I saw roots threading cleanly through the spheres, drains running clear, and EC staying steady week after week. That’s when Hydroponic Growing Media Expanded Clay Balls became my default for seedling starts, DWC baskets, and aquaponic beds.
The industry is moving toward clean, reusable media that balances capillary action with airflow. LECA checks those boxes. In fact, many customers say transplant shock drops noticeably because roots get oxygen without waterlogging. Another trend: data-backed quality—publish the pH drift, the dust percentage, the compression strength. The better vendors do.
Origin: Nanjialiang Village, Lingshou County, Shijiazhuang City, Hebei, China. Material: 100% clay, kiln-expanded into lightweight, porous spheres. The result? Hydroponic Growing Media Expanded Clay Balls with excellent pH and EC stability for hydroponic and aquaponic gardening.
| Parameter | Spec (≈) | Test Method |
|---|---|---|
| Particle size options | 4–8 mm, 8–16 mm, 16–25 mm | EN 13055 sieving |
| Bulk density | ≈ 320–450 kg/m³ | ASTM C29/C29M |
| Water absorption | ≈ 15–25% | EN 1097-6 |
| Porosity | ≈ 65–75% | Mercury intrusion (lab) |
| Compressive strength | > 1.5 MPa (single pellet) | EN 13055 guidance |
| pH after 24 h soak | ≈ 6.8–7.5 | Grower soak test |
| EC (runoff) | Conductivity meter | |
| Dust fines | ≤ 1.5% by mass | Dry sieve |
Hydroponic Growing Media Expanded Clay Balls are produced by: clay selection → pelletizing → drying → rotary kiln expansion at ≈1100–1200°C → cooling → sieving and de-dusting → optional washing → packaging. Quality checks include pH/EC soak tests, bulk density (ASTM C29), and size grading (EN 13055). Service life: around 3–5 years in continuous hydroponics; many growers report 8–10 reuse cycles with peroxide sterilization between harvests.
Pros: reusable, inert, lightweight, fast drainage with capillary “wicking.” Cons: rinse before first use (there’s always a bit of dust), and in very hard water, initial pH may creep up slightly—nothing a brief pre-soak can’t fix.
| Vendor | Origin | Sizes | pH/EC stability | Certs | Price/L (≈) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KeHui Minerals | Hebei, CN | 4–25 mm | Stable after soak | ISO 9001, REACH | $0.18–0.28 |
| EU Brand A | EU | 4–16 mm | Very stable | EN 13055, ISO 14001 | $0.32–0.45 |
| Generic Import | Mixed | 8–16 mm | Varies | — | $0.12–0.20 |
Custom sieving (e.g., 10–14 mm), pre-washed or sterilized batches, OEM bags (5L/10L/50L) or 1–2 m³ super sacks. I guess the biggest win is pre-rinsed media for commercial farms—it saves startup time.
A leafy-greens facility in the Gulf switched to Hydroponic Growing Media Expanded Clay Balls in NFT starter cups. Result: 7% faster rooting, 12% lower incidence of pythium after improving drain-back and adopting a 3% H₂O₂ turnaround clean. Anecdotal? Sure. But their weekly EC logs backed it up.
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