Scotty, does that pad have an override for the 2 hour auto off setting that seems to be a standard with almost all heating pads now sold?
I make my frame out of standard fencing that is welded with 2" x 4" wire mesh. (other folks have used closet maid shelving, wire cake racks, and even wire dish strainers that they've adapted. Any thing you use needs to be bendable or otherwise adjustable so that you can change the height as the chick grows.) I then make a pillow case to enclose both the heating pad and the wire frame inside the pillow case. (My most recent set up involved taking a piece of old sheet, and cutting it big enough to enclose HP and frame, then used my hot melt glue gun to "sew the overlaying fabric" around the frame/HP with the glue.) I like to place the frame on top of the pad so the chicks can snuggle up to the pad without contacting the wire frame. So, without any further intervention, the pad tends to hang down off the frame. I found short bungee cords (I believe they were 10") and used them on the underside to hold pad up against the frame to keep it from slinging down.
No, they don't damage the cord. But the sunbeam pad i bought had a removeable cord. I found that it was helpful to tape that union with some electrical tape so it couldn't be pulled loose.
I make my frame out of standard fencing that is welded with 2" x 4" wire mesh. (other folks have used closet maid shelving, wire cake racks, and even wire dish strainers that they've adapted. Any thing you use needs to be bendable or otherwise adjustable so that you can change the height as the chick grows.) I then make a pillow case to enclose both the heating pad and the wire frame inside the pillow case. (My most recent set up involved taking a piece of old sheet, and cutting it big enough to enclose HP and frame, then used my hot melt glue gun to "sew the overlaying fabric" around the frame/HP with the glue.) I like to place the frame on top of the pad so the chicks can snuggle up to the pad without contacting the wire frame. So, without any further intervention, the pad tends to hang down off the frame. I found short bungee cords (I believe they were 10") and used them on the underside to hold pad up against the frame to keep it from slinging down.
No, they don't damage the cord. But the sunbeam pad i bought had a removeable cord. I found that it was helpful to tape that union with some electrical tape so it couldn't be pulled loose.