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  1. #21
    BPnet Senior Member kitedemon's Avatar
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    This is the corner of my vision enclosure.

    Hosted on Fotki


    The visions have rounded corners and it is moulded in a single piece. The PVCx enclosures are 3 or more separate pieces glued together they meet at a hard corner it is harder to clean.

    My pvcx enclosure.

    Hosted on Fotki

  2. #22
    Registered User MrBrute's Avatar
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    Thanks!!!

  3. #23
    Registered User MrBrute's Avatar
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    Re: I've made my choice for a CAGE

    Quote Originally Posted by kitedemon View Post
    This is the corner of my vision enclosure.

    Hosted on Fotki


    The visions have rounded corners and it is moulded in a single piece. The PVCx enclosures are 3 or more separate pieces glued together they meet at a hard corner it is harder to clean.

    My pvcx enclosure.

    Hosted on Fotki
    really?

  4. #24
    BPnet Senior Member kitedemon's Avatar
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    yup, the vision is way easier to clean. In the end however it makes no difference really tank tub rack enclosure brand, as long as you can maintain the correct temps and basic humidity with enough security for the animal and it is feeding and doing its snakey things as it should it doesn't matter at all. Each have advantages and disadvantages and as I own and maintain all of the above I can say with knowledge and experience that they all can work and I have no dead clean preference of this one is best. Not one is perfect and weighing all the issues and advantages there is no easy answer to which one I like the most or least.

  5. #25
    BPnet Veteran LLLReptile's Avatar
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    Re: I've made my choice for a CAGE

    Just wanted to note that while the cages may LOOK thick, the vision cages actually conduct the heat from a heat pad extremely well. We use them in all of our retail stores, and heat pads are the only source of heat for our display V211s. In the store I manage, we start many of our baby to juvenile balls in the V211s, and they do fantastic as long as they have enough hiding places. I highly recommend lots of cork flats in combination with the plants, the combination of foliage and hiding places under the wood works well.

    -Jen
    LLLReptile and Supply Company, Inc -- Your one stop herp shops online, and retail stores in Southern California!
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  6. #26
    Registered User MrBrute's Avatar
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    Re: I've made my choice for a CAGE

    Quote Originally Posted by LLLReptile View Post
    Just wanted to note that while the cages may LOOK thick, the vision cages actually conduct the heat from a heat pad extremely well. We use them in all of our retail stores, and heat pads are the only source of heat for our display V211s. In the store I manage, we start many of our baby to juvenile balls in the V211s, and they do fantastic as long as they have enough hiding places. I highly recommend lots of cork flats in combination with the plants, the combination of foliage and hiding places under the wood works well.

    -Jen
    what UTH do you all use for these type enclosures?

  7. #27
    BPnet Veteran Tfpets's Avatar
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    I would recommend a vision 211 as well for a ball python. I have 4 of them for some of my collection that I want more secure from the racks. I use this style for UTH: http://www.reptilebasics.com/ultrath...ter-uth-11-x11
    I also have several other vision tanks for some of my boas, Retic and burm. They have limitations as far as stacking and warping in the larger models but I just built a rack for mine that took care of the problems. The smaller ones are solid and you could easily stack 4 or more if you decided later on!
    I have nothing against any other tanks, I have just come across mine used on craigslist.
    5.3 normals, 3.1 mojave, 2.4 pastels, 1.0 yellow belly, 1.1 cinnamon, 1.1 het pied, 1.0 pastel/yellowbelly
    Also: Burmese, Retic, RTBs, kenyans, dumerils, hognose, corns, milk, king, uromastyx, leopard geckos, bearded dragons, dart frogs, tortoises, tarantulas, cockatiels, reef tanks, dogs, cats, chickens, goat, rats and???


  8. #28
    Registered User MrBrute's Avatar
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    Re: I've made my choice for a CAGE

    Quote Originally Posted by Tfpets View Post
    I would recommend a vision 211 as well for a ball python. I have 4 of them for some of my collection that I want more secure from the racks. I use this style for UTH: http://www.reptilebasics.com/ultrath...ter-uth-11-x11
    I also have several other vision tanks for some of my boas, Retic and burm. They have limitations as far as stacking and warping in the larger models but I just built a rack for mine that took care of the problems. The smaller ones are solid and you could easily stack 4 or more if you decided later on!
    I have nothing against any other tanks, I have just come across mine used on craigslist.
    Up to what age can they live in the v211?
    Last edited by MrBrute; 10-25-2012 at 10:43 AM.

  9. #29
    BPnet Veteran Tfpets's Avatar
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    I would say for life, unless they turn out to be one of the monsters.
    5.3 normals, 3.1 mojave, 2.4 pastels, 1.0 yellow belly, 1.1 cinnamon, 1.1 het pied, 1.0 pastel/yellowbelly
    Also: Burmese, Retic, RTBs, kenyans, dumerils, hognose, corns, milk, king, uromastyx, leopard geckos, bearded dragons, dart frogs, tortoises, tarantulas, cockatiels, reef tanks, dogs, cats, chickens, goat, rats and???


  10. #30
    Registered User MrBrute's Avatar
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    Re: I've made my choice for a CAGE

    Quote Originally Posted by Tfpets View Post
    I would say for life, unless they turn out to be one of the monsters.
    really? I assumed the bigger the cage the better....

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