There's something new I've seen at Drs. Foster and Smith and elsewhere...
Hydor has come out with this undergravel heating system for terrariums and aquariums. You put it under the gravel and it heats the tank from the bottom up and it seems it would do so in a very even manner. Much like underfloor heating in a house.
I like the idea of a virtual elimination of hot spots in the tank and judging by the guidelines provided by Drs. F&S it looks like your wattage of heat per gallon is much lower, thereby giving you a significant energy savings.
In addition, the external controller works with all the lengths of Hydrokable and there are two types. One has an LCD display while the other is just a dial control, but both are electronically controlled and have a temperature probe which is separate from the heating element.
This seems like a wonderful way to go, but it's more expensive than a traditional submerged heater. The other disadvantage is that if it ever fails, it's under your substrate and you'd have to tear everything up to get it.
Has anyone installed this in their setup? I'm curious, because it seems like a very good idea...
Here's the link...
http://www.drsfostersmith.com/Product/Prod_Display.cfm?pcatid=11371&N=2004+113767
Hydor has come out with this undergravel heating system for terrariums and aquariums. You put it under the gravel and it heats the tank from the bottom up and it seems it would do so in a very even manner. Much like underfloor heating in a house.
I like the idea of a virtual elimination of hot spots in the tank and judging by the guidelines provided by Drs. F&S it looks like your wattage of heat per gallon is much lower, thereby giving you a significant energy savings.
In addition, the external controller works with all the lengths of Hydrokable and there are two types. One has an LCD display while the other is just a dial control, but both are electronically controlled and have a temperature probe which is separate from the heating element.
This seems like a wonderful way to go, but it's more expensive than a traditional submerged heater. The other disadvantage is that if it ever fails, it's under your substrate and you'd have to tear everything up to get it.
Has anyone installed this in their setup? I'm curious, because it seems like a very good idea...
Here's the link...
http://www.drsfostersmith.com/Product/Prod_Display.cfm?pcatid=11371&N=2004+113767