Posted by:
Colchicine
at Sun Nov 9 18:52:08 2003 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by Colchicine ]
I do think they are better than nothing, or a traditional electronic thermometer. Ironically, I have had one for over a year but have only recently started to use it. I've been using it several times a day. I maintain a collection of over 150 reptiles and amphibians, cross contamination is always a huge issue! Especially when it comes to aquatics, it is not always easy to disinfect a thermometer probe between testings. Another advantage to this unit, is being able to measure the animal itself. Basking turtles are easily disturbed, and it's not practical to measure the temperature of amphibians, keeping your distance from these two has its advantages. I do not find that I need a greater range (the RadioShack unit has a range of two feet), nor would a laser site help anymore. Those are more practical for dangerous machinery, or parts that are difficult to get to. Although I do not know what the accuracy range is, I find it to be acceptable.
Anybody with a large collection with sensitive animals should consider getting a noncontact infrared thermometer. click here for the link
----- ...the oldest task in human history: to live on a piece of land without spoiling it."
Aldo Leopold (1938)
"Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us."
Calvin and Hobbes (Scientific Progress Goes 'Boink', 1991)
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