Insect Trap on EBay
- desertbirds
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- Posts: 1318
- Joined: 21 Nov 2010, 09:13
- Location: Alice Springs
not sure if people have experimented with lights but what i have noticed is that the my bug zapper (minus the zappy bit) attracts loads of moths and some other insects,my normal house globes under the verandah are far more effective at attracting smaller insects like flying ants.A combination of the lights might really useful for attrcting a bigger range of insects.
- SamDavis
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- Posts: 2578
- Joined: 03 Jan 2011, 14:01
- Location: Douglas Park NSW
Got it yesterday. This morning it had around 50 or so small moths inside. No mozzies that I could detect! So not so good for its intended purpose, but looks to be ok for our purpose. Of course, not very scientific to judge based on one night's catch.
Good idea - this thing has two small "black" light tubes, so maybe I could replace one with a standard white tube.desertbirds wrote:A combination of the lights might really useful for attrcting a bigger range of insects.
- jusdeb
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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- Joined: 12 Mar 2009, 19:43
- Location: Dubbo, NSW
- Location: Western Plains NSW
Be careful the white tube doesnt get too hot and melt any plastic parts or catch alight ....any dried out critters will combust easily .
Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue.
David Brent
David Brent
- E Orix
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- Posts: 2740
- Joined: 29 May 2009, 23:30
- Location: Howlong on NSW/Vic Border 30km from Albury
- Location: Howlong NSW
With regard the dozens of insects around a household light.
While it may seem alot, the black lights attract far more bugs from a longer distance and remember they don't just hang around the light but are sucked in and more then come in. We have fiddled with these for years and in my opinion a 40watt circular UV tube in front of a 300mm kitchen exhaust fan has worked best for me.
While it may seem alot, the black lights attract far more bugs from a longer distance and remember they don't just hang around the light but are sucked in and more then come in. We have fiddled with these for years and in my opinion a 40watt circular UV tube in front of a 300mm kitchen exhaust fan has worked best for me.
- SamDavis
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- Posts: 2578
- Joined: 03 Jan 2011, 14:01
- Location: Douglas Park NSW
Although this insect trap gizmo works, it doesn't catch as many critters each night as I'd like. Just enough for one of my aviaries (housing 5 pairs). My diamonds and tricolors go nuts for the moths - amazing watching them do the "humming bird hover" as they pluck a moth in mid-air. No doubt a larger light and exhaust fan (as E Orix says) would work much better.