I am wondering what is the better option for heating a crabitat, a heat lamp or a heating pad?
Thanks,
Steph

My house gets into the eighties and nineties in the summer, so I have a thermostat so I don’t accidentally cook my crabs.odelayheehoo wrote:I just dislike heating lamps due to the fact that you can't set them down on glass lids or they will crack, and they have a higher chance of drying out the substrate and zapping humidity. It's much easier if you install a heating pad like an ultratherm with insulation if needed.
You can buy thermostats that you plug the heaters into to control the temperature, but often those are not needed.
They do! There are several brands, and they are sold for reptiles to tightly control the basking temperature to prevent thermal burns from when a reptiles lays on top of where the pad is placed. UTHs do naturally have a max temp (around 120-140 degrees F and will cycle on and off, so the way we use them for hermits - on the back of the tank to warm the air - thermostats are not normally needed. The crabs won't be touching them and they don't usually get hot enough to cause trouble.
My heaters remain unplugged for the entire summer, and I watch the weather forecast for the night in case it gets chilly unexpectedly.JoeHermits wrote: ↑Sun May 19, 2019 10:32 amMy house gets into the eighties and nineties in the summer, so I have a thermostat so I don’t accidentally cook my crabs.
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