Quote:
circulating the air inside the terrarium with a small fan as opposed to bringing new air in
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This is something I've been experimenting with for a while, and would agree that simply moving the "same" air around is good enough. However, in my situation, generating a large amount of internal circulation poses a problem: too much heat. My tank is such that the bulbs are not totally isolated, and I use CFL's which get quite warm. My initial thinking was to exhaust the warm air occasionally, to maintain intermediate temps. The problem there is humidity. Only recently I re-installed the circulating fan, but instead of running it "openly" in the tank, I've cut a roughly fan-sized hole in the undergravel filter which sits on the bottom of my tank, and placed the fan blowing into it. This (so far) is working wonderfully. Tank temps dropped significantly, and airflow is very even, and slow, throughout the tank. Now, I exhaust for 15 minutes every 4 hours in this tank, daytime temps 70-72, nighttime 66-68.
A question I pose is how to increase day-night temp differences. My strategy has been to increase air intake (by running exhaust every 2 hours for 15 min)
to cool by evaporation. But, once again, humidity drops below acceptable levels. My plants reside in a living area, so an open window wont work. It's like the air is so dry outside the tank, evaporation inside can't keep up. I am in the process of building a cool growing tank, with an external evaporating cooler, and wonder if anyone has used something like that for similar purposes. I guess I could put an ultrasonic next to the tank! (or cough up dough for a mist system)
good growing
tyler