🐾 Your Pet's New Home Awaits!
The winemana Reptile Terrarium Aquarium Breeding Tank is a spacious and secure habitat measuring 14.5" x 10.5" x 10". Made from durable acrylic, it features ventilation holes, a secure locking handle, and a transparent design for easy observation. Perfect for a variety of small reptiles and insects, this terrarium is lightweight and easy to set up, making it an ideal choice for pet owners.
Material Type | Acrylic |
Color | Clear |
Item Shape | irregular shape |
Style | Simple |
Item Weight | 1.84 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 10.5"L x 10.2"W x 14.2"H |
Tank Volume | 1.5 Liters |
Vivarium Type | Terrarium |
Target Species | Reptile |
Specific Uses For Product | Indoor |
Additional Features | Lightweight |
L**E
Love it.
Great for tarantula. The only thing I found wrong is few of the parts were broke, still able to use it. If you move it to much some of the substrate will fall through the cracks. Over all a great product.
K**L
Portable and perfect for most juvenile tarantulas
I got this when I bought my sling. She fit in it for about 2 yrs. The build quality is functional and the adhesive parts work perfectly. I love the design, and easy to put together.
R**L
Regretful purchase
Keep looking unless you want to spend an ungodly amount of time to assemble all while hoping little pieces didn’t break; you can decipher the instructions, and all the pieces are included.Here are the important things to know:This is basically a kit you have to assemble. The panels are a thin acrylic that has adhesive paper on both sides for ‘protection’. You will spend a good half hour peeling the paper of both sides of every panel. From there, it’s a matter of identifying which panel is which. You then slide tabs onto slots. Each tab is then secured in place by a silicone ring (rubber band essentially, only thicker and presumably more durable). It’s easy enough, but here’s the problem. Two of the tabs in my delivery had a broken nub, so there is nothing for the ring to hook onto on one side of those two tabs. As others have mentioned the final product is pretty flimsy. When all the panels are assembled, your next step is to “fix the small spacers with screws at the holes on both ends of the top” and then you “fix the small disc with screws at the hole in the middle of the top”. The problem here is that there were no screws in the bag. One can’t fix the tabs and disc with screws when there are no screws.I only bought this for it’s size. I wish I would have taken more time to realize this was a self assembly, flimsy enclosure that is not adequate as a long term solution. Please look elsewhere, you can find better.
K**S
Not perfect for every animal, but has held up for over a year!
Waited awhile to review this just to see how well it held up! I’ve had a subadult (5”) Brachypelma boehmei in this for over a year, and it has worked really well for him. One of the top locks did snap off really early on, but I jammed a piece of cardboard in the slots to keep it shut. That, along with the 2 functional locks, have been fine for HIM, but with animals that try to escape I wouldn’t risk it. It’s got a lot of floor space, but isn’t deep enough for more than a couple of inches or so of substrate, so I don’t think a burrowing species would work. The airflow is excellent—I’ve never had a hint of mold. Mine is an arid species, so it works well for him, but a more moisture dependent species wouldn’t do well. The ventilation slats are fairly wide, so crickets can and do escape. A smaller species of tarantula or other animal could easily slip out, so it’s definitely something to be cautious about.Overall, it was a great purchase for this particular tarantula. I don’t use heat or light, so no warping issues.
T**.
Fine overall, top and closure could be better
I just put a juvie P. metallica tarantula in this enclosure. The top is a piece of plexi that hinges thanks to two nubbins that fit into holes on the side pieces. The small nubs or pegs in relation to the larger holes make for a loose fit. This means the lid moves freely, but basically feels like it is just set loosely on top. Perhaps not helping is that this top piece is ill-sized and only comes into contact with two of the four sides. This provides minimal structural support for the lid, which therefore bows slightly under its own weight. Since the lid is only supported on two sides, it is difficult to turn the swivel locks with enough pressure to rotate them, but also not too much to bow in the plastic (which misaligns the locks with the slots they are supposed to fit into, making the enclosure very annoying to close - and the tiny feeding hole is basically useless, so I'm opening and closing it often). Assembling it was not too difficult, although removing the protective paper film from every piece of plexi took me forever and a day.
S**R
Major gaps, bowing/sagging just three weeks after purchasing. Dangerous for any creature!
I have an A. Chalcodes (Arizona Blonde) that was rehoused into this enclosure and I regret putting her in here. While pulling off the protective sheeting WAS a hassle like others have stated, that was the least of the problems with this enclosure. First things first, it is not at all sturdy; even with the rubber bands (which I did not struggle with, btw). The walls are extremely flimsy and bend at the slightest pressure. Once I had the walls assembled, I was surprised to realize the lid is actually two separate pieces; the stationary piece roughly 2.5" in width and the movable lid with the feeding hole taking up the remaining width. There are three "latches" (and I use that word loosely) to "secure" (again, loosely used no pun intended) the lid in place; a circular one in the middle and two hinge-types on the front corners that get pushed into slits.From the second I finished assembling this, I knew this was going to be absolute trash and I should have returned it right then and there. The corners were already buckling and the lid had a sizeable gap between the two pieces (large enough to cause concern for my terrestrial tarantula that thinks she's arboreal to get her toes stuck). Before I added any substrate to it, it was already sagging/bowing.We are now three weeks in and this is getting returned. I worry every day that my T is going to do her daily climb and get a leg stuck somewhere it shouldn't and risk losing her due to ripped off legs. Substrate is also starting to fall through the cracks on the bottom, causing concern for an imminent collapse, risking death for my girl or escape.The only pro to this enclosure is the clarity and I can easily observe my beautiful T at any time, but her safety comes first and this enclosure just does not fit that very important bill.
D**O
Calidad y precio
Un producto de buena calidad y que es totalmente adecuado para ya sea un pequeño reptil o un arácnido de tamaño medio
D**.
Bin zufrieden
Der Zusammenbau (wenn die Schutzfolie erst einmal abgefummelt ist) ist sehr einfach und alles hat mechanisch gepasst. Das Terrarium schließt auch sehr gut ab. Ich nutze es für Karnivoren (Nepenthes)... mal sehen ob das gut funktioniert.An den Hersteller: eine etwas größere Variante wäre sehr gut :) Es scheint hier leider nur sehr wenig Auswahl zu geben.
R**L
Excelente
Excelente producto fácil de armar muy ligeroLo recomiendo
R**A
Medidas incorrectas
El material es muy bueno, es fácil de armar, pero yo le tuve que adaptar un ángulo en la orilla superior para que cerrará, pues la tapa venía muy pequeña y se iba para adentro... me urgía cambiar a mi tarantula y por ello no solicité devolución, pero si revisen que las piezas coincidan antes de quitar los protectores
M**O
Excelente
Muy prácticaAlgo delgada pero no hay problema porque la uso para terrario sin animales
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3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago