Quote:
Originally posted by Jotun
1st question: how much would an enclosure like that cost?
2nd: How hard would it be to make one?
3rd: Wouldn't a UTH be a good way to heat during the night? It's what I use in my beardie enclosure and it works wonders witha 60 watt ceramic heat emiiter
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It cost us about $300 total to build the cage and pay for all the fixtures (light and heat panel), wood/melamine for the cage itself and the stand we built to support the melamine cage, all the hides, wood and other cage "furnishings", the dual-zone therm/hygrometers, etc.
It wasn't very difficult to build - as long as you plan ahead and measure correctly all you really need to be able to do is hammer and use a drill and screwdriver. Home Depot can cut everything for you as long as you know the measurements. (We did some of the cutting etc, ourselves just b/c my bf is a "handy" guy.)
We didn't bother trying out a UTH. It may or may not have been effective in the enclosure. We figured if we could have 1 heating device which provided the exact gradient we wanted, then why bother tinkering with trying to get a UTH and possibly multiple CHEs working properly? You'd spend about as much for the UTH/CHEs as you would on 1 radiant heat panel, and the heat panel can easily provide just about any temp range we could possibly want. It really all just comes down to a matter of preference. We haven't had to make any special room temp. adjustments, and we don't have to tinker with adjusting the heating devices to provide a night drop.
All we have for this enclosure is a timer to turn the light on and off, and a timer which kicks on a fan every few hours to keep the humidity from getting too high. Minimal maintenance is required - just spot cleaning daily as needed, fresh water daily, soaking/baking the reptibark every month or so.
We're lazy, or at least as lazy as possible while still taking the best possible care of our animals, so we try to automate as much as we can with each of our enclosures.