stevereecy
New Member
So here's a question. Hoping one of you folks with a UVB sensor can answer this. I've seen UVB lights advertised as having 5% of natural sunlight. I'm wondering if that is even close to correct. Have you ever taken your UVB meter outdoors and took a reading from the sun itself? How did it compare to the UVB bulb. Lets say, if the UVB meter was 12-inches from the UVB bulb.
I'm asking because I have a back porch that catches the morning sun only. I'm considering placing my chams out there, with just an incandescent bulb or infrared bulb for heat only. My reasoning is that 3 hours of 100% UVB is way better than 12 hours of 5% UVB, because 3 * 1.00 > 12 * 0.05 ...I was thinking my chams could winter there since I live in North Florida and the porch faces south.
But admittedly, the 5% UVB is all day, compared to only a fourth of a day of full sun. Wonder how much actual time they are in the sun in the day when there is tree canopy and sharp-eyed predators to contend with? Probably more than a fourth.
Is this crazy? Anyone tried this?
Love to know.
Steve
I'm asking because I have a back porch that catches the morning sun only. I'm considering placing my chams out there, with just an incandescent bulb or infrared bulb for heat only. My reasoning is that 3 hours of 100% UVB is way better than 12 hours of 5% UVB, because 3 * 1.00 > 12 * 0.05 ...I was thinking my chams could winter there since I live in North Florida and the porch faces south.
But admittedly, the 5% UVB is all day, compared to only a fourth of a day of full sun. Wonder how much actual time they are in the sun in the day when there is tree canopy and sharp-eyed predators to contend with? Probably more than a fourth.
Is this crazy? Anyone tried this?
Love to know.
Steve