Mew
New Member
Here'e my video guide!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj5qQBmvanI&feature=youtu.be
I use this to provide a constant moving water flow, as well as adding some humidity to the enclosure!
Step 1: Bore a hole into a 2 liter bottle. Make sure to thoroughly rinse out the bottle first, and never use soaps or cleaning chemicals!
2: Insert a two pronged tubing attachment, one end inside the bottle and the other poking out, at around a 45 degree angle. Try to insert is fairly high on the bottle. Seal the attachment point with hot glue, JB weld or silicone.
3: Attach a nice amount of length of tubing to the outer attachment and seal it with hot glut. Remember! You can always take a little bit of tubing off, you can never add a little bit back on!
4: Attach a T-joint attachment to the end of the tubing, then more tubing, and repeat until you have enough T joints for the amount of drippers you'd like to be emitting.
5: Seal the end of the final T joint with either a plug attachment or hot glue. If using hot glue, attach a small bit of hosing to the end so as not to clog the t joint with glue.
6: Attach hosing of the right length to the stem of the T joints poking out away from the central tubing. Remember to seal all connections with glue to ensure a watertight connection!
7: Attach an emitter to the end of each stem tube, I like ones with the flow adjuster so I can shut off/turn on any drippers, or adjust the flow rate.
8: Attach central tubing to some kind of T shaped attachment for use later in securing to the enclosure.
Congratulations! I can build one of these guys in 30 minutes to an hour, and they work great! All in all it costs 5 to 10 bucks.
Hope you enjoy!
-Zack
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj5qQBmvanI&feature=youtu.be
I use this to provide a constant moving water flow, as well as adding some humidity to the enclosure!
Step 1: Bore a hole into a 2 liter bottle. Make sure to thoroughly rinse out the bottle first, and never use soaps or cleaning chemicals!
2: Insert a two pronged tubing attachment, one end inside the bottle and the other poking out, at around a 45 degree angle. Try to insert is fairly high on the bottle. Seal the attachment point with hot glue, JB weld or silicone.
3: Attach a nice amount of length of tubing to the outer attachment and seal it with hot glut. Remember! You can always take a little bit of tubing off, you can never add a little bit back on!
4: Attach a T-joint attachment to the end of the tubing, then more tubing, and repeat until you have enough T joints for the amount of drippers you'd like to be emitting.
5: Seal the end of the final T joint with either a plug attachment or hot glue. If using hot glue, attach a small bit of hosing to the end so as not to clog the t joint with glue.
6: Attach hosing of the right length to the stem of the T joints poking out away from the central tubing. Remember to seal all connections with glue to ensure a watertight connection!
7: Attach an emitter to the end of each stem tube, I like ones with the flow adjuster so I can shut off/turn on any drippers, or adjust the flow rate.
8: Attach central tubing to some kind of T shaped attachment for use later in securing to the enclosure.
Congratulations! I can build one of these guys in 30 minutes to an hour, and they work great! All in all it costs 5 to 10 bucks.
Hope you enjoy!
-Zack