Adding foil to UVB lights

cushcameleon

New Member
I noticed that several people have aluminum foil placed behind their UVB lights to better reflect rays. Should all UVB tubes have aluminum foil behind them? Or is it only needed for special circumstances (i.e. tall cages)?
 
I noticed that several people have aluminum foil placed behind their UVB lights to better reflect rays. Should all UVB tubes have aluminum foil behind them? Or is it only needed for special circumstances (i.e. tall cages)?
It's good to have the reflecting tape/foil along with a hood on the tubes, because it yields higher UVB output. I experimented with this this past weekend with the meter and it seemed to make the basking spot about 10microwatts higher with a 5.0 than previous measurements.
 
Is there any circumstance where you can have to much UVB if your using a tube? I have a 5.0 on both of my cages but the height of each cage is only ~24 inches, would adding foil to the lights be beneficial or too much?
 
I have to use 10.0 as my husband says the foil is not at all safe, a real fire risk. For mw as I have tall cages the 10.0 seems better.
 
Actually bright white reflects more light then foil that's why the reflectors in newer model lamps are white.
Howdy Dean,

I couldn't spot the article at the moment, but there was a write-up about white vs. aluminum reflectors and aluminum reflected the UVB at much higher levels than the white paint or porcelain reflectors. I was surprised too :eek:. It was a fairly controlled study. I thought it was on the UK UVB site but I didn't spot the part about white vs. aluminum there :(.

http://www.uvguide.co.uk/fluorescenttubereflectortests.htm
 
It must be a new study because with my frog tanks the plants need high light levels and most frogers use white. But I could be mistaken if you find the info that proves foil is brighter please post.
 
Why would you mess with it anyway? You buy a tube designed to output a suitable level of UV for your species, presumabley the product has been tested very carefully and with various commercially avail hoods/colors in mind , in a scientific manner and deemed suitable, 'as is' for normal use with normal reflecters.

You should consider ANY artificial source of UV, supplimentary at best in any case, If you want better UV for your animal, take it outside! Everyone has sunny days happening,
unless you live in antartica (6 months of fridgid twighlight) :)
 
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