michael
02-14-2009, 10:27 AM
A couple weeks ago, I received on order two 30 watt Avitech avian heat bulbs from Arcata pet supplies (cheapest I could find)...... So far I think their great, but of course there are some limitations. One nice thing is that these 30 watters are not really that hot. Albeit, with the exception of dangerous power cords, a bird could land on one and not really suffer burns. The only real issue at hand was where to place them. After having purchased the "ceramic" holders with clamps separately from Petsmart, the only way to utilize them was to ziptie them so they faced into and against the lower side of their cages. This was enough to provide an adequate heat exchange from just the rising of heat itself. Covering the cage while in use was a different story. A smaller cage I tried when covered reached a temp of 98 degrees F when checked by a thermometer. A little bit too warm. The larger cages when partially covered showed variables of around 80-92 degrees F. Not bad on those exceptionally cold winter days. This is really something you'd have to figure in depending on cage size and/or whether its covered at night.
For those who may be unfamiliar with these type heating elements. They do not give off the infared "red glow" such as that from certain reptile type devices. They do, on the other hand, give off an infared exchange of heat minus any light what so ever. That said, DO NOT use reptile bulbs around your birds unless you add a rotisserie, barbecue sauce, and are planning to eat them.
While i've seen similar ceramic bulbs used in many aviary's (generally of the flattened much hotter 150 watt and up version), i'm basically new to using them in a much smaller companion bird setting. Because i've noticed many members have recently had thoughts of purchasing Avitech Bulbs, any experience or idea's on using these type elements would greatly be appreciated..............:)
For those who may be unfamiliar with these type heating elements. They do not give off the infared "red glow" such as that from certain reptile type devices. They do, on the other hand, give off an infared exchange of heat minus any light what so ever. That said, DO NOT use reptile bulbs around your birds unless you add a rotisserie, barbecue sauce, and are planning to eat them.
While i've seen similar ceramic bulbs used in many aviary's (generally of the flattened much hotter 150 watt and up version), i'm basically new to using them in a much smaller companion bird setting. Because i've noticed many members have recently had thoughts of purchasing Avitech Bulbs, any experience or idea's on using these type elements would greatly be appreciated..............:)