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  1. #11
    BPnet Lifer Kodieh's Avatar
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    As was mentioned, of its in the herpstat then the herpstat is relaying the same amount of electricity to both assuming they heat exactly the same way.


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  2. #12
    Super Moderator bcr229's Avatar
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    Re: Heat Tape VS Cable - Electricity Bill

    Quote Originally Posted by digizure View Post
    I was just researching and here's what I came up with (by no means I am an electrician).

    I have a home made adult rack with two 39ft heat cables, both 100 watts each, plugged into a Herpstat 2. If I were to replace the heat cable with an 11" flexwatt, I'd need 25 feet and they're 20 watts per foot so that's 500 watts and I'd probably hook it up to a Herpstat 1.

    Is it safe to assume that the heat cable will save on the electricity bill?
    Nope because you don't pay for kilowatts you pay for kilowatt-hours, so your bill depends on how efficiently the tape versus cable transfers heat to the tub, and how long each has to run to maintain the temperature in the tub.

  3. #13
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    here i can give a good answer, since this is basically a physics question.

    if you want to turn electricity into heat, your energy conversion efficiency will be close to 100%. no matter what system you use.

    in contrast, if you want to use electricity to pump water up a mountain, you will have losses in the form of heat, and not all of the energy will actually end up moving water upwards.

    but what losses could there be in this case? it gets warm, but it doesnt produce light or sound or radiation or mechanical energy or anything else.

    so if the setup is the same and you heat to the same target temperature, electricity cost should be the same. it could only be different if, for example, one method heats more air surrounding the enclosure, or also heats a wall of your room, and the other method is better at delivering the energy to the underside of the tub.
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  4. #14
    BPnet Veteran Expensive hobby's Avatar
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    Heat Tape VS Cable - Electricity Bill

    I think I'm just gonna make the move to whole room heating instead. Just got a new heater last night for the snake room that's being setup, and it stays 82° with no fluctuation. It has it's own thermostat which seems incredibly accurate for what it is, but I'm thinking of doing an "in tub" probe for an external controller to make sure the temps in the tubs stay where I want them.

    Hopefully no more lights, heat tape, UTH's, CHE's or anything. Only flexwatt as a backup.


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  5. #15
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    I was thinking of building a "cabinet" and use one source of heat - maybe a flexwatt on the bottom and a fan on top to circulate the air. Pretty much similar to an incubator.

    I wish I could heat up the room but I'm in San Diego and the insulation here SUCKS.

  6. #16
    BPnet Veteran Artemille's Avatar
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    I did the math once, and I pay under $10 a month for three racks consisting of about 9.3 feet of heat tape. I also use back heat since my house stays pretty warm. Less feet, less watts, less kilowatt hours.

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  7. #17
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    I will need a total of 59 feet of flexwatt for both racks (combined) and I have another rack that has about 15 feet of flexwatt already installed. All of these racks are in my office. I also have 16 feet of flexwatt running under Animal Plastics in the living room.

    M

  8. #18
    BPnet Veteran Expensive hobby's Avatar
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    Heat Tape VS Cable - Electricity Bill

    Quote Originally Posted by digizure View Post
    I will need a total of 59 feet of flexwatt for both racks (combined) and I have another rack that has about 15 feet of flexwatt already installed. All of these racks are in my office. I also have 16 feet of flexwatt running under Animal Plastics in the living room.

    M
    Sounds like you need a heated snake room


    Sent From an Enclosure
    Ball pythons:
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    -1.0 Dark Normal
    -0.1 Light Normal
    -0.1 Pastel
    -1.0 Lesser

    Retics:
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    -1.1 Fire Tiger Het Albino
    -1.0 Purple Sunfire
    -1.0 Tiger
    -0.1 Lavender Tiger
    -1.0 Motley Het Purple

    Boas:
    -0.1 Hypo BCI
    -1.0 Hypo BCI (Hades)
    -1.0 EBV Red Group Hypo Pastel BCI (Ares)
    -0.1 Normal BCI (Isis)
    -0.1 Anery BCI (Medusa)
    -0.1 Normal BCI (Hera)
    -0.1 Normal BCI (Athena)

    Blood Pythons:
    -1.1 VPI Super Stripe Mead Line Borneo Ultra Breit

    Epicrates Striatus Striatus
    -1.1 Dominican Red Mountain Boa

    Burmese Pythons:
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    Anacondas:
    -0.2 Yellow Anaconda
    -1.0 Yellow Anaconda

  9. #19
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    Yeah, I wish I could but the room I have my racks in isn't insulated. Actually, my entire place isn't insulated so I wouldn't be able to heat the room very well.

  10. #20
    BPnet Veteran Raven01's Avatar
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    Re: Heat Tape VS Cable - Electricity Bill

    Quote Originally Posted by bcr229 View Post
    Nope because you don't pay for kilowatts you pay for kilowatt-hours, so your bill depends on how efficiently the tape versus cable transfers heat to the tub, and how long each has to run to maintain the temperature in the tub.
    ^^^ That right there.
    The 500W tape will likely only run at 40%(assuming proportional control is used) if your heat cable is sufficient right now giving you approximately the same heat output.
    Where the tape wins for me is the larger surface area to transfer heat to the enclosure more evenly.

    For heating cost saving keeping the heat in the enclosure should be your concern. i.e. insulation and draft reduction. It could also be possibly that ambient temperature adjustment might save a buck or two as well.

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