Airyaman
Songster
The typical surface temperature of a brooder plate is 105F-125F. Heat lamps can get as hot as 250F - 500F or even 750F at the surface! Obviously that is a burn hazard for chicks, and even can be a fire hazard for some materials like cardboard (ignition point 425F - 475F) and wood shavings (ignition point 500F).Are heating plates really less risky than heat lamps? Or are they similar in risk in terms of spontaneously starting a fire? Which one is guaranteed to be 100% safer?
Also, I have a red heat bulb that is 250 watts 120 volts plugged into a short extension cord into a wall socket. The wall socket was recently installed (part of an electrical upgrade from fuses to circuit breakers) and is rated for 20 amps and it goes directly to the breaker box outside. Is my heat lamp safe from catching fire?