How do I know this light is safe????

JDUBK

New Member
Hey guys just wondering about my lights and if they are safe for my chams? How do you know if they are safe? I have a few fluorescent light in my room and I am using those now. What kind is safe and which ones are bad???
 
Hey guys just wondering about my lights and if they are safe for my chams? How do you know if they are safe? I have a few fluorescent light in my room and I am using those now. What kind is safe and which ones are bad???

What kind of lights are you using?
 
if they are just standard room lights, dont use them. actually, imho, if you dont know what kind of lights they are or how old they are period, than dont even think about using them. go pick yourself up a brand new 5.0 today. your chams gonna need that uvb with the heat to metabolize.
 
Sorry to sidetrack the conversation but speaking of lights, anyone know what the lifespan is for these 5.0 uvb tube lights, it says a year on the boxes but im sure they can last a little longer than that?

plus in SA u pay through ur arse to get these lights :(

i pay round about R450-00 which is about 64$...
madness i tell you!!
 
I would get tax/credit on it if i was in America but here in South Africa i dont think we get.

U cant be serious bout 6 months, on the actual box says 1 year minimum...
ill have to replace soon then :mad:

Thanks for your time guys
 
I would get tax/credit on it if i was in America but here in South Africa i dont think we get.

U cant be serious bout 6 months, on the actual box says 1 year minimum...
ill have to replace soon then :mad:

Thanks for your time guys

Without a UVB meter it's impossible to tell what the output of your lights are.
The reason most people say 6 months is because most fixtures people use aren't specifically designed for the proper bulb type.
Each fixture typically has different power output which hurts the lifespan of the bulb.
In tests under perfect conditions, yes bulbs last for a year minimum, in the real world, 6 months is your safe spot.
 
yes i have a 5.0 UVB its brand new. I was told for temperature on a female you can do it with regular florescent bulbs. Instead of having a basking light on them.

Yes most of us on here use reg incandescent household bulbs for heat. I personally use 60 watt bulbs for all my panthers for their basking bulbs.
 
Without a UVB meter it's impossible to tell what the output of your lights are.
The reason most people say 6 months is because most fixtures people use aren't specifically designed for the proper bulb type.
Each fixture typically has different power output which hurts the lifespan of the bulb.
In tests under perfect conditions, yes bulbs last for a year minimum, in the real world, 6 months is your safe spot.

Thanks for the info, im gonna have to replace them asap then, theres an upcoming expo where prices may be alot cheaper here so ill do it then.

Peace :cool:
 
Hey Stryder

I am also from South Africa :D

Picked up my 2 month old Veiled Cham on Saturday.

Purchased a repti glo 5.0 14w compact and a zoo med 50w basking lamp, as they did not have the Repti Suns. :/



If you want to be notified when to replace your Repti Glo bulb I went to the exo-terra website put the details in there is sends you a mail when you should replace the repti-glo's, but i am yet to see how they calculate this, and i am sure a solar meter is still the best thing to really test the bulbs.

http://www.exo-terra.com/en/account/restore_the_rays_signup.php

@everyone els, Just a quick question will the repti glo 5.0 14w compact damage my chams eyes?
 
I don't think anyone can say that it will for sure damage your animals eyes, but there have been instances where it has occurred as a direct result of using compact fluorescent bulbs and it is generally not thought of as a good idea. There is a thread on here showing a guy measuring the out output of one of these bulbs, I will see if I can find it, it was pretty crazy results.
 
For my female veileds I use a double fluorescent fixture with a Repti-sun 5.0 and a regular fluorescent tube light in the fixture.
 
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