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75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
Today my sister kindly purchased a red infrared heat bulb for me today while she was at Petsmart with her dog. It's a 75 watt heat bulb and I currently have it on my female BPs tank. She is housed in a 20 gallon enclosure with Cypress Mulch, a rock hide, few plants and a water dish. Now, before when I had the 60 watt basking bulb it was too cold (80F+) so I switched to the infrared 75 watt because it gets cold in my room at night and during the day since the other bulb didn't help. I don't have a lot of money at the moment, but I might just get a dimmer. At the moment, the temperature reads 97.7 on the warm side. Is that too hot, or just fine? At night, it cools down in my room so I'm pretty sure the temps will drop a few degrees.
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Registered User
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
97.7 is too hot. put the lamp on a dimmer and turn the bulb down a smidgen and you should be fine. Then when you go to bed at night, you might want to turn it back up.
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The Following User Says Thank You to knott00 For This Useful Post:
CoolioTiffany (07-28-2009)
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Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by knott00
97.7 is too hot. put the lamp on a dimmer and turn the bulb down a smidgen and you should be fine. Then when you go to bed at night, you might want to turn it back up.
I prolly won't be able to get a dimmer until Friday.. so... I don't know what to do right now Dx
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Registered User
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
If possible,raise the light up away from the tank.
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The Following User Says Thank You to WickedBalls For This Useful Post:
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Registered User
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by WickedBalls
If possible,raise the light up away from the tank.
x2
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The Following User Says Thank You to specialk01510 For This Useful Post:
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Registered User
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by WickedBalls
If possible,raise the light up away from the tank.
Honestly I would rather trust the snake's ability to thermoregulate itself and move to the cool side of the tank. Doing this may decrease your temp gradient and make your snake unable to find a cool spot to escape the heat.
Lamps have a cone of effect, moving the lamp farther away from the tank raises the amount of area that it is affecting.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by knott00
Lamps have a cone of effect, moving the lamp farther away from the tank raises the amount of area that it is affecting.
But the same energy over a larger area means less energy per unit area. More heat will dissipate to the air rather than hitting the substrate.
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Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by mrshawt
But the same energy over a larger area means less energy per unit area. More heat will dissipate to the air rather than hitting the substrate.
So, should I just leave the lamp where it is? But trust me, my BP won't move no matter how hot or how cold it is. She stays put in her hide.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by CoolioTiffany
So, should I just leave the lamp where it is? But trust me, my BP won't move no matter how hot or how cold it is. She stays put in her hide.
No, that was regarding knott0's post. You'll want to raise it up higher from the tank until you get the dimmer. The dimmer is ultimately the best solution though, because it will help to minimize the bulb's effect on the humidity.
May I ask why you even have to use bulbs?
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Re: 75 watt infrared heat bulb.. too hot?
 Originally Posted by mrshawt
No, that was regarding knott0's post. You'll want to raise it up higher from the tank until you get the dimmer. The dimmer is ultimately the best solution though, because it will help to minimize the bulb's effect on the humidity.
May I ask why you even have to use bulbs?
Well, my mom used to use a heat pad for our King snake and she said it heated up the bottom of the tank too much and it could "burn" the snake. Now, from what I've read about UTHs, they are safe and unlikely to burn a snake if the snake is sleeping on top of it (while it's on the outside) on the bottom of the enclosure. When I ask my mom, "I need some UTHs they work a lot better for the pythons and my humidity will stay in the cage better." He immediate response is always "no". She also says they are fire hazardous. But that is why they come with those things that you put on each edge under the tank so the pad doesn't burn the surface. Though, I'm going to buy some UTHs at the expo this Nov. with MY MONEY. Now she can't do a thing about it :]
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