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Date: | Thu, 5 Dec 1996 10:09:43 -0500 |
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>Chris,
>
>I have to start this by saying that I have no Top Bar Hives myself. I
>am planning to start one or two next spring. I think that the width of
>the top bars is critical so that bee space will not be violated. Jim
>Satterfield has posted that the width for Apis Mellifera must be 35 mm,
>or 1-3/8". That is the width of fully drawn comb plus bee space. I
>think that if you went narrower, your combs may not be deep enough and
>if wider, they may build more burr/brace comb. Again, that's just my
>opinion. Joel or Jim??
>
>Cheers,
>Kevin Palm
>Grafton, Ohio
> ----------
In the top-bar hives I have used, I stuck to 1 3/8" spacing in the brood
chamber. In the 6" deep "supers" I used fixed supports (dowels) spaced at
1.5 inches and coated with wax on the underside. (Note: those hives used
top bars with bee space between them (spaced) and were supered on top like
a regular hive.)
SO I don't know about varying the spacing in long tbh's. In a frame hive
you can space the combs a bit wider in the brood chamber (i.e., use 9
frames instead of 10). In that case the combs are already constructed and
the bees haven't much of a choice.
With top bars only, and the bees building new, natural combs, they might
not respect wider spacing, and you could end up with odd or cross-connected
combs. (?). The 1 3/8" spacing seems to be fine. FWIW
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