Well, i knew it was only a matter of time before someone tried to rail me for my post. Boy I sure hate it when threads take left turns like this. *sidenote* can we make some requirement that you send a PM first?
Anyhoo, can of worms already open. Ok lets address a few things...
First of all, thank you for your post. Its important to have and want to have everything as safe as possible for your animals.
I personally would not use something of that quality in any outlet in my home. If anyone has questions as to safety, ask anyone that has experience in building such items.
I appreciate the compliment. I've wired near to 300 homes/businesses in my short-lived life and am not such a snewbie in that department. I can give you some good advice on building such items...
Even just asking the guy at Home Depot or Radioshack as to how to make something as safe as possible and they will be glad to help you out.
Please...DO NOT ask these people for advice(esp Radioshack). 98% of the employees know JUST enough about electricity to give you the wrong advice and still make it sound like a good idea.
Whenever working with electricity around a wet environment it is imperative to have a GFI outlet, like the one in your bathroom that shuts off when overloaded (say if you throw the hair dryer in the full bath tub).
I sure hope that nobody is using this item in the bathroom. :eek1: Just fyi, this is strictly a guide for the heating in your snake rack. Not to adjust the voltage for your hair dryer. GFCI would be pretty useless in this situation. But hey, I'm all for safety! If you want to spend $25 for a GFCI alone go for it, but you wont find any "UL listed" rheostats using them...
All that I am saying is that if you are going to build a custom unit like this, make it safe so that if maybe somebody pulls on the wires somehow (tripping over it, trying to straighten it, whatever) that you don't have live bare wires hanging out.
Well if thats all your saying, then good. We are on the same level. I certainly don't want ANYONE being able to pull these wires and it fall apart. Nor do I want anyone tripping over their cord. My suggestion is, if you build this item(which you are quite obviously not), when you secure it to your rack or UTH move the cords out of walkways so that you do not trip on them. Also, make sure that the wires are secure in the box(usually tested by pulling with sufficient might and making sure they are not moving).
I bought one of those "Zoo Med Rept Temp" rheostats, and I guarantee that my design is 3x safer. It is no longer being used on any of my heaters because of that fact. For one thing(as Mike mentioned), I cannot bring the temperature to below 100F. Secondly the box where the control dial is wired into has fallen apart(the metal screws that hold it together stripped out the plastic thread - go figure).
I'm done with part 1 of this response...we'll see if I can muster up the strength to finish all that I have to say later.
:wavey: