Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
I ordered "the generic yellow one" lol off of Amazon last night after seeing the responses here. It was just under $13 with free shipping. Everyone I've talked to says they are worth every penny.
Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SDA
I also, use this one.
Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
I got mine from Home Depot. I am also an engineer, so 1000 uses for this thing! It's called "General" and is the IRT207 model, and was around $20. I can turn the laser off to check temps close to snek without blinding him.
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Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
I've had cheap ones from Amazon and Walmart and they always went erratic on me. Differences of 4-10 degrees reading the same object sometimes. I upgraded to a fluke 62 max and I'll never go back to the cheap o brands.
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Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
Oddly enough I bought two cheap ones at about 10 dollars each off eBay - 4 years apart and docent makes and the temps are identical !!
Maybe I just got lucky ....
Some expert guy online said that the expensive ones have the same 'innards' as the cheap ones but are just packaged better - for what it's worth
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Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
https://ball-pythons.net/forums/cach...a/IMG_0461.jpg
I just bought this KLEIN for $60 dollars at Home Depot. More than I wanted to spend, but Klein is a top brand name, and since I plan on breeding combo-morphs and piebald designer babies, I need to make sure the temps are perfect!
I am using a rack with plastic tubs, With this infrared thermometer gun, I should aim it at the bare plastic under the substrate where the heat-tape is and get around 92 Fahrenheit. Then aim it at the cool side of the tub and get around 82 Fahrenheit. Is this the right method?
Re: 2017.....What temp gun are you using?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
audioclass
I've had cheap ones from Amazon and Walmart and they always went erratic on me. Differences of 4-10 degrees reading the same object sometimes. I upgraded to a fluke 62 max and I'll never go back to the cheap o brands.
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I agree. I have been a service technician for 20 years, and you almost ALWAYS get what you pay for when it comes to tools. I have bought tools for $xxx and they broke within a year. Then I have replaced that tool and bought a similar industry leading quality tool for DOUBLE the price and it lasted for a decade or more of heavy use. So in the long run, expensive tools are not only better quality, but a better value in the time. With electronics it is no different. Generally the higher end electronic tools like an infrared thermostat will be as high quality as the price tag.