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#1
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I used to ship my snakes using those heat packs. I would have to drive 5 hrs from Grand Prairie to Edmonton then put them on a plane to where ever. Sometimes it was 12 hours before they got to their destination. I never once had a problem when they were packed properly. I dont think you will have a problem with yours.
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#2
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Well, last night the temp in the box peaked at 71.6F, which isn't bad I guess. This morning it dropped to 69.3. The corals will be a bit cool upon arrival but they'll be ok. I can always add another heat pack just to be safe.
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THE BARQUARIUM: 55 gallon cube - 50 lbs LR - ASM G3 skimmer - 30 Gallon sump - 22 Gallon refugium / frag tank - 4x 24 watt HO T5's - Mag 9.5 return - Pin Point PH monitor - 400 watt XM 20K MH in Lumenarc reflector - Dual stage GFO/NO3 media reactor - 6 stage RODI auto top up -Wavemaster Pro running 3 Koralia 2's. Fully stocked with fish, corals and usually some fine scotch http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=55041 |
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#3
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Whenever I get anyting shipped, usually comes with 2 heat packs just taped to the lid of the styrofoam shipping container.
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Dan Pesonen Umm, a tank or 5 |
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#4
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This is what I did one on the bottom and one on the lid. If you can find the foot warmer pads they get the same temperature and are 2x the size.
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#5
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I am surprised the ambient temperature isn't higher seeing as the temp coming off them is significantly higher than fish/reptile heat packs. This is interesting. I wonder if they would work better than the fish/reptile heat packs then?
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