border
sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum
 

Go Back   sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum > Enclosure Creation Forums > General Enclosure Discussion

Notices

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-16-14, 12:01 PM   #1
Skits
Member
 
Skits's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb-2012
Location: Montreal
Age: 30
Posts: 450
Country:
Building enclosures needing humidity

I'm going to be re-building a few of my enclosures as they don't hold humidity well and the build is a pain in the *** (three 6x2 tanks, 7 feet tall and I can't separate them or get them out of the room).

I want to know what's the best way to build them so they can keep humidity and not mold or rot? I'll be making it out of wood.

What wood do I use, what coating, etc..
__________________
3.0.0 dogs - 6.3.0 cats - 2.5.8 tarantulas - 0.1.0 skink - 1.0.0 beardie - 1.1.7 snakes - 0.0.3 scorpions - 0.1.0 leopard geckos - 0.0.1 crested - 1.1.0 golden geckos - 2.0.0 uros - 3.2.0 turtles - 0.1.0 toad - 0.0.3 black moors
Skits is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 03-16-14, 04:50 PM   #2
formica
Member
 
formica's Avatar
 
Join Date: May-2013
Location: London UK
Posts: 1,481
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

yacht varnish and silicone sealant - not full proof tho, how long it last depends on how carefully its applied.

what in particular are you keeping in them? what kind of heating do they require? cant beat plastics for humidity control really, but the type you use depends on the heating required
formica is offline  
Old 03-16-14, 08:08 PM   #3
wareagleA5
Member
 
Join Date: Jan-2014
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 94
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

I used epoxy on my plywood build, and researched the way it's used in wooden boat building to completely encapsulate the wood and protect all the joints with epoxy fillet. The guys building plywood fish tanks are also using epoxy and paint on pond liner, some of them have tanks that are over 5 years old with no problems.
Epoxy is expensive especially if you buy it retail instead of directly through a distributor. I bought 1.5 gallons from raka epoxy for $92 shipped and I only used about 1 quart on a 5'x3'x2' enclosure so I have more than enough to do several more enclosures.
wareagleA5 is offline  
Old 03-17-14, 08:46 AM   #4
jarich
Member
 
jarich's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2011
Posts: 2,237
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

For a snake enclosure all you really need to do is use a water based polyurethane. Its much simpler and also a bit cheaper. Give it a couple coats and your golden. If you were going to be using a soil substrate or something like that where moisture will be touching the wood directly all the time then Id say go with the epoxy resin, yes. Not the varnish though fomica. Found out that stuff leaches some pretty gross chemicals when in contact with water/soil.
__________________
The plural of anecdote is not data
jarich is offline  
Old 03-17-14, 09:57 AM   #5
formica
Member
 
formica's Avatar
 
Join Date: May-2013
Location: London UK
Posts: 1,481
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

Quote:
Originally Posted by jarich View Post
For a snake enclosure all you really need to do is use a water based polyurethane. Its much simpler and also a bit cheaper. Give it a couple coats and your golden. If you were going to be using a soil substrate or something like that where moisture will be touching the wood directly all the time then Id say go with the epoxy resin, yes. Not the varnish though fomica. Found out that stuff leaches some pretty gross chemicals when in contact with water/soil.
yes important point - choose a Zero VOC product - this applies to all sealants including epoxies, varnishes and plastic sealants (water based polyurethane sealant doesn't grantee zero VOC, unless the brand specifically states it on the tin)

to be honest no sealant is ever going to be perfectly safe, even zero or low VOC, and its one of the reasons i prefer to use plastic these days, including polycarbonate in bigger enclosures (eg my sav setup)
formica is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 03-17-14, 09:26 PM   #6
wareagleA5
Member
 
Join Date: Jan-2014
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 94
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

Quote:
Originally Posted by formica View Post
yes important point - choose a Zero VOC product - this applies to all sealants including epoxies, varnishes and plastic sealants (water based polyurethane sealant doesn't grantee zero VOC, unless the brand specifically states it on the tin)

to be honest no sealant is ever going to be perfectly safe, even zero or low VOC, and its one of the reasons i prefer to use plastic these days, including polycarbonate in bigger enclosures (eg my sav setup)
Good point, VOC compliant and zero VOC are different and it has to be stressed to use zero VOC. 100% solids epoxy is what I recommend, and it should be cured at the manufacturers recommended temperature to fully cure so there is no outgassing after after it hardens. Epoxy is actually a thermosetting plastic(polymer) and much more resistant to heat and chemicals than thermoplastic. Make sure not to use polyester resin and vinyl ester resin. If you pick up "fiberglass" resin from the hardware store or autobody shop it will most likely be polyester resin. I also agree with jarich that epoxy is probably overkill unless you're going to have a heavy moist substrate.
wareagleA5 is offline  
Old 03-19-14, 01:37 PM   #7
Skits
Member
 
Skits's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb-2012
Location: Montreal
Age: 30
Posts: 450
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

Alright thanks for the replies everyone It's for my tegu and my boa. The tanks they are in now don't hold humidity and don't have the proper wood so it looks like it's slowly falling apart. I don't want mold in it or for it to rot so I want to start building something before that happens.

So for an enclosure that will have almost a foot of soil constantly in there, and 80% humidity, I'd use an epoxy resin, right? Can anyone recommend a good brand?
__________________
3.0.0 dogs - 6.3.0 cats - 2.5.8 tarantulas - 0.1.0 skink - 1.0.0 beardie - 1.1.7 snakes - 0.0.3 scorpions - 0.1.0 leopard geckos - 0.0.1 crested - 1.1.0 golden geckos - 2.0.0 uros - 3.2.0 turtles - 0.1.0 toad - 0.0.3 black moors
Skits is offline  
Old 03-19-14, 04:58 PM   #8
wareagleA5
Member
 
Join Date: Jan-2014
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 94
Country:
Re: Building enclosures needing humidity

Epoxy :*Epoxy Resins and Hardeners
Raka, Inc. 772-489-4070
These places both sell good epoxy, I used raka because they have great customer service and they also have smaller,1.5 quart kits, starting at $40.00. If you don't want to order online you can find west epoxy at lots of places, but it's only sold at retail prices. You'll want to make sure you get laminating epoxy, it's thinner and penetrates wood better. You can also pick up filler material to mix with your epoxy online for the corners and seems.
wareagleA5 is offline  
Closed Thread

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:47 PM.

Powered by vBulletin®
©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.

right