Here in Georgia we have extreme heat with humidity around 60 to 100% on a regular basis. Keeping our ac set to 70 still leaves our upstairs almost unbearable. If I were to have one enclosure upstairs, the heat would be ridiculous. My sons room is downstairs, having one enclosure in his room made his room feel like a sauna. I didn't mean to start a debate about this issue. I believe that there are a lot of factors such as insulation, ac, and outside temps that should be considered when addressing the topic.
That still seems odd that it would heat up the home that much.
You probably do not need quite so much heat on the cage, and could decrease it down to 100 watts or use a thermostat with it.
A fan to help circulate the air (especially with an open window) can help, as would using curtains or blocking off the area that the bearded dragon is in. See if you can put a box over the heat light (which will be ugly, but hey, might help) and the top of the cage, to keep the warm air in and to help redirect it back down into the cage.
Good luck, it sounds more like your family is looking for excuses not to keep the bearded dragon.
Smaug's lights DO make it a little warmer in my son's room (but we live in Southeast Louisiana - heat and humidity are awful during this time of year!). To combat it, he turns the ceiling fan on high and uses heavy (but not light-blocking) curtains that help keep the sun (another heat source) out.
You could also try a box/portable fan in that room.
I'm not sure how it would affect a whole floor, though. I'm worried that this is more about their fear, than anything else.
I think you should call your family out on their own irrational thoughts... Its just a couple light bulbs... Do they actually think that the light bulbs that they have on in their rooms dont give of any heat at all? Or their tv,s and computers etc? .....
I think you should call your family out on their own irrational thoughts... Its just a couple light bulbs... Do they actually think that the light bulbs that they have on in their rooms dont give of any heat at all? Or their tv,s and computers etc? .....
And here's the solution...
Replace 2 or 3 light bulbs in your house (same room or floor as the enclosure) with LED bulbs. The reduction of heat in the room, LED's produce less heat than incandescent, halogen etc, will compensate for the added heat of the enclosure...whether real or imagined. :roll:
And you'll be saving your family money since LED's consume much less energy and can last up to 25 years.
I think you should call your family out on their own irrational thoughts... Its just a couple light bulbs... Do they actually think that the light bulbs that they have on in their rooms dont give of any heat at all? Or their tv,s and computers etc? .....
And here's the solution...
Replace 2 or 3 light bulbs in your house (same room or floor as the enclosure) with LED bulbs. The reduction of heat in the room, LED's produce less heat than incandescent, halogen etc, will compensate for the added heat of the enclosure...whether real or imagined. :roll:
And you'll be saving your family money since LED's consume much less energy and can last up to 25 years.
Funny thing... due that the floor with my enclosure (upstairs) has soo many windows. . We almost never use lights ( other than my bearded dragon's ) so that wouldn't help...
I can't see one 150 watt bulb heating an entire floor to an unbearable temp. If that was true, then in the winter time, you wouldn't need any heat at all. You could just put a 150 watt bulb on each floor and have a toasty warm house. I personally think someone is looking for a reason to blame the dragon. I mean I don't know your full circumstance but I will tell you that there is no way that a 150 watt bulb can heat a whole floor in a standard size house. One room, possibly although very slim but 1 whole floor, no way. And the UV tube will put out next to nothing for heat.
Although I will say that a 150 watt bulb running full on without a dimmer in a 3ft cage in the middle of summer is probably cooking your dragon. I run a 160 watt bulb in my 4ft cage for Harley and at the moment I got it dimmed down to about 1/2 to 3/4 power depending if it's overcast here in Seattle or sunny.
I can't see one 150 watt bulb heating an entire floor to an unbearable temp. If that was true, then in the winter time, you wouldn't need any heat at all. You could just put a 150 watt bulb on each floor and have a toasty warm house. I personally think someone is looking for a reason to blame the dragon. I mean I don't know your full circumstance but I will tell you that there is no way that a 150 watt bulb can heat a whole floor in a standard size house. One room, possibly although very slim but 1 whole floor, no way. And the UV tube will put out next to nothing for heat.
Although I will say that a 150 watt bulb running full on without a dimmer in a 3ft cage in the middle of summer is probably cooking your dragon. I run a 160 watt bulb in my 4ft cage for Harley and at the moment I got it dimmed down to about 1/2 to 3/4 power depending if it's overcast here in Seattle or sunny.
Oh, I thought I had read on an earlier post that you were using a digital probe thermometer. 150 watts sounds like a lot for that sized tank. How far away are you holding the gun when checking the temps?
[I merged all 3 of your threads since they were about the same thing to make it easier for you and us to follow. It also helps keep the forum neater]