Hi there,
I've just started experimenting with coconut chips so for what it's worth, my 2
I get mine from the pet store and it's been discussed in length here and in other forums that this stuff needs to be soaked and washed thoroughly until all saults are washed out. I even bought a TDC hydometer for that reason.
On average, it takes a few days of overnight soaking, depending on the water one uses.
Mine look more like long fiber not chips (only an few pieces of those here and there), so that might be a difference in application as well. The reason I switched was that I too found orchid bark mix staying too wet in a center and then some said that this would correct the probelm if switched to coco product.
Well.....you're right, the moment it gets wet, it tends to take all the room in the pot and some Phals with fragile roots start sulking. The mature, more established Phals seem to be doing well though.
Once I observe that the stuff is still wet a few days later
, I tend to get concerned and start taking coco fibers out with the skewer fearing the root rot and to provide some more room for the roots.... Then I end up with a half empty pot and dry roots and have to water every single day, like it or not.
I also noticed difference on a hot day vs rainy day. The coco dries up really quick on the top but still holds moisture in the middle, which I find being rather confusing. On a positive side, you could tell by the color if there's still some moisture - quite a plus compare to bark!
So now I'm thinking may be I should use half fiber and half bark chips (larger pieces, not small as they tend to fall on the bottom and stay wet.)
Overall, it appears that in small quantities, coco is more roots friendly and easier to get where you want it to go in comparison with bark. But once I put just a bit more it tends to get and stay wet, at least for me.
I don't know if this is at all helpful as I'm still experimenting.
Lilia