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Actually I think a temp control would be very useful for some people, myself included. My room swings from about 60-80s and I'd like knowing that there is something in place if I am not home to keep my guy from burning. Assuming you still have UVB and maybe some plant lights on, he shouldn't be that confused. It isn't bright and sunny every in the wild, I don't see why the basking turning off for a little at too high of a temp would matter. It would be nice if there was something to automatically dim the basking though instead of shutting it off completely.
I didn't mean the bulb was going to change the whole cage. i just meant, if my bulb is on while my cage is at 60 ambient vs 85 ambient, isn't it still going to push the basking into dangerous territory, or just be unnecessary? If i check my basking in the cool mornings it might be low 80s, but mid day it can go up to mid/high 90s. I turn it off if it reaches that. although i have not caught my chams basking directly under it When it gets that high, but still worries me.
There are people who have reported burnings at 90 so maybe i'm just paranoid. I remember @Andee mentioning this, maybe she has some input. even if burns aren't a worry unless the basking is well over 100, i also don't see how turning it off to help cool down would cause problems. surely there are cloudy days in madagascar. I wonder if replicating natural environments with cloudy days/storm modes/etc helps any though, or just adds unneeded stress...
LOL, There are many on the market you can buy to do this, but I found them expensive so I designed my own.@broderp i need to get on your level with those controllers.
I thought chams needs a heat source that gives off light so they know where it is.
Keep in mind that you're trying to control radiant heat by measuring air temperature. Here's another thought experiment. In much of the US the air temperature on any summer afternoon can be anywhere between 70 deg and 100 deg, but the output from the sun is the same. I would make sure the lamp isn't hot enough to burn with the "5 minute hand test", and not worry as much about the air temperature. Use the timer.
The comparison is that the bulb and the sun are both radiant sources. As you note in your second sentence, radiant heat can warm an object without warming the air. The problem is that many people are trying to control their radiant heat with thermometers that measure air temperature.I was told that as well, but all 3 of my Chams know exactly where the basking spot is without a doubt. I'm not sure I buy into that school of thought any more. Sherman goes to the highest point under the heat emitter every morning to "warm" up. He spends a lot of time there. He then walks down to his feeder as soon as he sees me put his food in for him. When I check up on him thru out the day on his "Web-Cham" I see him up there often. I believe it's way to much of a coincidence.
Interesting concept, but how does radiant heat from a bulb compare to that of the sun? Radiant heat from my understanding generally will warm an object and make it feel warm without the actual air around the object actually being warmer. So from a practical perspective, radiant heat is warmer than actual air temp.
Since we are not measuring direct sunlight in most enclosures, then the question is "How does radiant heat from a bulb or emitter compare to that of the sun?" I also have to wonder if there is some constant to radiant energy that can be assumed by the air temp. I've never seen a care sheet or book on Chams saying that a Cham's temp should be measured using a radiant scale rather than a temperature one. This leads me to believe that radiant heat is either factored in to the actual temp or its not a factor. But what do I know about this subject?
The comparison is that the bulb and the sun are both radiant sources. As you note in your second sentence, radiant heat can warm an object without warming the air. The problem is that many people are trying to control their radiant heat with thermometers that measure air temperature.
Going off on a tangent now, but it's seemed odd to me that chameleons will sit there and get thermal burns. Every other animal I know of will move away from excess heat. But maybe in nature there is no need, because they will never get close enough to the sun to get a thermal burn, and if a fire comes through they are dead anyway. Plus, heat lamps are different from the sun because of the way the energy diminishes. IIRC, radiant energy reduces as 1/r^2, where "r" is the distance to the source. Obviously, there is no way to appreciably change the distance between yourself and the sun. But, with a light bulb that is 8 inches away, the 3 or so inches between the top of a veiled's casque and the bottom of its head represent a 2x drop in radiant energy. Maybe the chams would be better with higher power heat sources placed further away. That would give a larger warm zone with less of a vertical gradient.
But, I only know enough to get myself in trouble.