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  1. #11
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    Snakes don't bask........ The only thing you need with tubs and in general is belly heat. Ambient temps are good, but not necessary, and they certainly don't need basking (they are nocturnal). As long as your have some sort of UTH with a thermostat or rheostat, I'd invest in a temp gun to make sure the hot spot doesn't exceed 93*, and you should be all set. They hold ambient and hot spot temps well. Better than glass tanks that's for sure.
    Last edited by Skittles1101; 05-05-2011 at 10:25 AM.
    2.0 Offspring, 1.1 Normal Ball Python, 1.0 Pastel Ball Python, 0.1 Albino Ball Python, 0.1 Pinstripe Ball Python, 0.1 Banana Ball Python, 1.0 Pied Ball Python, 1.0 Normal Hognose, 0.1 Veiled Chameleon, 0.0.1 G.pulchra, 0.1 P.metallica, 0.1 M.giganteus

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  3. #12
    BPnet Veteran Johan's Avatar
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    Re: sterilite containers

    Quote Originally Posted by Druzy View Post
    So is it more difficult to maintain basking, cool side, and ambient temps in tubs?
    I actually have a heat mat on both sides of my tub. One for the warm and the cool keeping it around 80. I use a dimmer on the cooler side. I use 4 large binder clips to keep my tub locked down.
    0.1 Normal Ball Python--> Tuna
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    I have no fear of losing my life - if I have to save a koala or a crocodile or a kangaroo or a snake, mate, I will save it.
    -Steve Irwin (RIP)

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  5. #13
    BPnet Royalty ballpythonluvr's Avatar
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    Re: sterilite containers

    Quote Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    Snakes don't bask........ The only thing you need with tubs and in general is belly heat. Ambient temps are good, but not necessary, and they certainly don't need basking (they are nocturnal). As long as your have some sort of UTH with a thermostat or rheostat, I'd invest in a temp gun to make sure the hot spot doesn't exceed 93*, and you should be all set. They hold ambient and hot spot temps well. Better than glass tanks that's for sure.
    This is awesome advice. Tubs are far better then tanks. I just recently figured this out myself. No more tanks for me ever again.

  6. #14
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    Yeah I know that they dont bask. Just didn't know how to word it, and everyone knows what your talking about when you say "bask."

    I also thought they were a lot better than glass tanks. The glass tank is nice for viewing, but thats all. I live in AZ and its almost impossible to maintain 60% humidity espicially during the summer. And with the glass tank my UTH wont allow my tank to reach 93-95 without a secondary heat source which is a red light bulb that sucks all moisture!

    If anyone can post pictures of there tubs it would be greatly appreciated!

  7. #15
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    Here' mine and they work out awesome. I used a metal rack $40 from Walmart, 34 qt tubs from Walmart with lids, wood boards for the bottom of each shelf, flexwatt taped to the bottom of the wood. I now use this as my quarantine rack, but they fit 2 med RBI hides and a water dish inside them, so the bp feels secure but not cramped. For a young bp I wouldn't suggest anthing much bigger than the 34 qt...I made the mistake of getting huge 110qt tubs at first thinking they are about the size of my tank....yeah my bp stopped eating lol. Smaller=better.
    I actually have a 4th one on top now too
    2.0 Offspring, 1.1 Normal Ball Python, 1.0 Pastel Ball Python, 0.1 Albino Ball Python, 0.1 Pinstripe Ball Python, 0.1 Banana Ball Python, 1.0 Pied Ball Python, 1.0 Normal Hognose, 0.1 Veiled Chameleon, 0.0.1 G.pulchra, 0.1 P.metallica, 0.1 M.giganteus

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  9. #16
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    Thanks for sharing your photos!

  10. #17
    BPnet Lifer snakesRkewl's Avatar
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    If you don't feel like using clips or bungee cords then get a melamine book shelf and nail the shelves close enough together so the tubs slide right under the shelf above making it impossible for the snake to lift the lid
    Jerry Robertson

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  12. #18
    Registered User LizardPants's Avatar
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    Re: sterilite containers

    Quote Originally Posted by Druzy View Post
    So is it more difficult to maintain basking, cool side, and ambient temps in tubs?
    Not really difficult, just different. Actually, PP/PS tubs may be easier for you to control than glass, or melamine. You should tailor your setup based upon the actual environmental conditions where you live, and the temperature at which you keep the room(s) that your reptiles are in: how well it's insulated, reliable HVAC, weather conditions (what happens if the power goes out, will they overheat, or get too cold?) .

    With rack designs that are more open (Freedom Breeder, ARS, Fusion, Animal Plastics economy line) you'll want consistent room temps in the high 70's to 80 degrees.

    Enclosed racks (Animal Plastics, RBI) hold heat better, and are more suited to maintaining cool side temps in rooms that are kept at lower temperatures, or the temperature fluctuates.

    Either design can be suplemented with a low wattage flexwatt on the cool end, controlled by a separate thermostat (or one thermostat with multiple probes).
    Last edited by LizardPants; 05-05-2011 at 12:55 PM.

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  14. #19
    Registered User LizardPants's Avatar
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    Whether you use binder clips, straps, or tight fitting racks, you will absolutely need something supplemental to keep the lid closed. Snakes are escape artists.

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  16. #20
    BPnet Senior Member kitedemon's Avatar
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    I guess I wasn't quite as clear as I could have been tubs have no insulating value. They will drop temps almost instantly when heat is removed. That means that you get inefficient heating there is no weigh to hold heat or to heat slowly. Tubs heat fast and cool fast that depending on the space can make ambient temps a bit interesting. That also makes it very difficult to build a GRADIENT although I am not sure you actually need one. I have absolutely noticed different behaviour when there is a good gradient. So not to be misunderstood a gradient would be at the hot spot 90º an inch off it maybe 89.5 a inch farther away 80 and so on my one conventional tank has a true gradient on about half a degree an inch. My rack has a hot spot of 90 and when you move off that it drops 5 degrees an inch so in 2 inches it hits 80 and holds there. That is not a gradient just a hot spot and cool spot. Tubs can solve a humidity issue but can cause a heating one, they are simply not better or worse just different. Tubs do really well in 80º rooms but not so well in 60º ones. Personally heating a whole room up in winter is very expensive (a herpstat a month more expensive) and seems a total waste of power.

    If you don't believe me about the tubs not holding heat take a lid of any tub or heavy container hold your hand under it and check the temps take you hand away and check it again and see what the difference is. I just did this with a tub from the rack and got, 88.6 with my hand and 76.1 with out. They hold heat very badly My best enclosure drops 2 degrees an hour with out power. So 5 hours before I start seeing 80º, when i had tubs it was like 10 degrees an hour. Slow to heat =slow to cool. Fast to heat =fast to cool.

    Ambient temps are very important they are under valued and not paid as much attention to as they should be. Snakes have long lungs (well ok long and short) The lung is a massive organ that runs 1/2 to 2/3 of the body. Cool air = cool core, no matter how warm the hot spot is if the air temp is cool the animal cannot get the core warm. The reverse is true. Tubs can be hard to keep the ambient temps controlled either too warm or cold, unless you heat the room to an acceptable ambient temp, 80 is the typically acceptable one.

    I am not saying tubs are bad I am not saying better either. Just different tanks can be hard to keep humidity in but they produce a even heat and off set an uneven heat pad, they heat slowly but cool slowly too. You keep saying tubs are better and will solve all your problems the tubs won't solve your problems you solve the problems all you are talking about is trading one set of problems for a new set of problems YOU still need to solve them either way.

    Tub, tank, rack, or enclosure it makes no difference, the person whom sets up the captive environment makes the difference, the type of enclosure does not.

    Personally I place higher value of even 'gentle' heat and mass than humidity. I am ok with a humidity range of 50-70 but am unwilling to tolerate much more than a 1 degree range on temperature. (set at 90 89-91 I can live with) In my quite cool home tubs present a heating issue that the only solution I found was to toss lots of cash at it (heating dollars). That is in an old drafty house where it hits -25ºF sometimes in the winter and summer rarely gets over 89ºF Did you look at a sideways tank? it solves most ambient temps tank problems and humidity as well, with the same cleaning properties of glass. Tubs are an answer but not the only answer.

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