Hey guys, I just built my beardie a brand new 4x2x2 crossfire and needless to say HE LOVES IT!!! I am having one problem though... My basking spot with a 75 watt household bulb is 101 degrees exactly (measured with digital therm) but the ambient cool side is about 86. Granted its 80 in my room, but still. I am thinking its the flood light fixture I bought which does not have the light cover on it. Any idea? Do they sell one that could be universal? You know, that thing that fits over the lamp to direct heat? Thanks so much guys if you have any ideas!
I had to add an additional bulb into my wooden "Timeless Spirit" design, which is fairly close to the Crossfire, to obtain a healthy ambient temperature on the warm side.
You could use a normal house bulb to produce some ambient heat or, as I did, use a spot/flood light to provide a 2nd/3rd basking spot. Mind you, I am using 45/50 watts, and I think one is a 35watt that use to be closer to a basking spot, and all on dimmer switches to regulate tempperatures.
My problem is more about it being too hot rather than too cold. My cold side is 86 degrees, to me that is much too hot. My basking spot is a toasty 101 which is great but im more concerned about the cool side
I also wanted a dome to direct heat and keep the cool side cooler. What I did was purchase a flukers deep dome (the small one) on sale at petsmart for around $12. I then bought a $8 spot light from home depot and took the hardware off it. I used the hardware from the light to grasp around the ceramic base, but disconnected the clamp part from it. I then got locking nuts, a bolt, and two eyes with machine screw ends. The photo below shows the final product. With this set up, I use a 65 watt spot on a in-line dimmer (also from home depot) and my basking area is 104 (I have a 8 week old) while the cool side is 79-81 with 77-78 degree room temperature. I would assume a cooler temp of 95 for an adult might allow for a slightly cooler range. I don't know if this helps, but I love it because the light is solidly attached, and I can redirect it a bit around the hot side of the tank. I took the pic before I screwed the top in place.
Thanks! I initially used eyes that had the wood screw on the end because I wanted to avoid going out the back, but it just didn't feel sturdy. I figured I already had wires going out the back so what was the difference. This is cheap and super sturdy. The only con is you basically cannibalize the light clip so you end up with a light dome without a working light clip. Oh well, the beardie is happy!