Welcome. Great scope, I've got the same one.
Dew rarely affects the primary mirror while observing, because it has fair thermal mass and is less prone to radiate itself down (to a temperature below the dew point) because the long tube acts like a dew shield -which is in effect an infrared shield of sorts.
The secondary mirror, being higher up and more able to radiate heat to the sky and smaller with less thermal mass, is the usual problem. That, and eyepieces.
Check out Bryan Greers website on thermal effects. I'd suggest that warming your primary is more likely to hurt your images by inducing thermal effects.
http://www.fpi-protostar.com/bgreer/index.htm
Many of us actually use fans to drive DOWN the primary mirror's temperature, and to remove the boundary layer.
But heating your secondary is a great idea. Also, fashioning a heater of some kind to sit in your eyepiece case is also good. EPs and secondaries (and corrector plates for those poor souls with Schmidt Cassegrains!) are dew prone to a terrible degree in some conditions.
Check our the SVFDS (Snake Valley Fog and Dew Society) pics here for some chuckles!
http://www.iceinspace.com.au/forum/s...878#post230878
Regards,
Scott