Rockwool Cubes for Hydroponic Propagation & Growing
Rockwool cubes are the mid-size to large rockwool block format used for transplanting rooted seedlings and cuttings into established drip-irrigated or ebb and flow hydroponic systems. Available in 2-inch, 3-inch, and 4-inch configurations (and larger), rockwool cubes serve as the root zone substrate for individual plants during the vegetative stage and into early flowering -- they are placed directly on a drip emitter, nested into a larger grow slab, or positioned in an ebb and flow system. The open fiber structure of rockwool provides excellent air porosity and water retention balance for recirculating nutrient solution delivery. Browse our complete rockwool growing media collection for the full range of formats.
Cube Sizes & Applications
2-inch cubes are the most common transplant size -- receiving rooted cuttings from 1-inch or 1.5-inch starter plugs when the root tip is first visible at the plug base. 3-inch cubes provide additional root zone volume for plants spending 3-5 weeks in the cube before transplanting to a slab or larger container. 4-inch cubes are used for longer veg cycles or larger plants that benefit from more root zone volume before final transplant. Match cube size to your production timeline -- plants held in undersized cubes become root-bound and nutrient-limited before the intended transplant date.
Cube Preparation & Handling
Pre-soak all new rockwool cubes in pH 5.5 water for 1 hour before use -- the mineral binder in rockwool is alkaline and raises the pH of dry cubes to 7+ without pre-treatment. After soaking, drain to field capacity before planting. Cover cube surfaces with light-blocking rockwool covers to prevent algae growth on the moist cube surface under grow lighting. Fast shipping.
Rockwool Cubes FAQ
What size rockwool cube do I need?
2-inch cubes: for transplanting seedlings and rooted cuttings from starter plugs, spending 1-2 weeks in the cube before transplanting to a slab or larger system. 3-inch cubes: for plants spending 3-4 weeks in the cube during veg. 4-inch cubes: for longer-cycle veg programs or plants spending 4-6 weeks before final transplant. The cube should match the time the plant spends in it -- a plant root-bound in an undersized cube before the next transplant is ready shows stunted growth and nutrient deficiency symptoms from depleted root zone volume.
How do I transplant a seedling from a starter plug into a rockwool cube?
When the root tip is visible emerging from the base of the starter plug, the cutting or seedling is ready to transplant into a rockwool cube. Pre-soak the destination cube at pH 5.5. Make a hole in the center of the pre-soaked cube (or use cubes with pre-formed holes) sized to accept the starter plug snugly. Place the plug into the hole with minimal disturbance to the emerging root. Do not compress the cube tightly around the plug -- a snug but not tight fit maintains the air porosity that rockwool depends on for healthy root zone conditions.
Do rockwool cubes need pH adjustment?
Yes -- new rockwool cubes are alkaline from the mineral binder used in manufacturing. Always pre-soak new cubes in pH 5.5 adjusted water for at least 1 hour before use; check the runoff pH after soaking to confirm the cube is buffered to the target range. Running nutrient solution at pH 5.5-6.2 throughout the crop cycle maintains the rockwool at the appropriate pH for nutrient availability. Never allow the rockwool pH to rise above 6.5 -- calcium and phosphorus become less available above this range in rockwool systems.
Can I reuse rockwool cubes between crop cycles?
Rockwool cubes with extensive root colonization are difficult to reuse cleanly -- roots interpenetrate the fibers throughout the cube volume, making it impractical to remove them completely for sanitization. In commercial operations, rockwool cubes are typically single-use. For hobby growers, partially-colonized cubes can be rinsed with dilute H2O2, dried, and reused for a second cycle if root colonization is not severe and no disease was present in the previous cycle. Cubes that have hosted diseased plants should never be reused regardless of treatment.
What is the difference between rockwool cubes and rockwool starter plugs?
Starter plugs (also called propagation plugs or mini-cubes) are the smallest rockwool format -- typically 1-inch to 1.5-inch -- used specifically for seed germination and rooting cuttings before any transplant. Cubes are the next size up (2-inch to 4-inch+) -- the transplant destination for rooted plugs during vegetative growth before final transplant to grow slabs or large containers. Plugs and cubes are part of a sequential production system: seeds and cuttings start in plugs, root and establish, then transfer to cubes, then to slabs or final growing containers.

