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- #11
GottaHatchEmAll
Chirping
Should I up the temp back up again?
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The incubator thermometer cannot be relied upon. They are notoriously inaccurate.My incubator thermometer
The thermometer lets you adjust the temperature and shows what temperature it's set on.The incubator thermometer cannot be relied upon. They are notoriously inaccurate.
I can almost guarantee, if you use a guaranteed accurate or calibrated independent thermometer
I understand that but unless you have a reliable base temperature, you don't know what you are adjusting to accomplish. Until verified, you are working with unknown nebulous values.The thermometer lets you adjust the temperature and shows what temperature it's set on.
Oh noYeah, every single incubator I have worked with has been off temp. I mean it's only been 3 but still. I have to set two of them between 103-104* to hit roughly where I need them to be. If I set to 99.5* they die (and yes, I did this too when my backup thermometer was wrong. Killed several expensive eggs :/)
I upped the temp back up to 102 degrees, put the egg racks back in, and candled the eggs earlier. They are still alive. No blood ring, and blood vessels were still visible. The eggs weren't turned for about 2 days, but they are okay. But the embryos do not seem fully developed so maybe they are muscovy eggs and not pekin eggs, since these eggs looked significantly different from pekin eggs when I compared the two. At first I thought they were pekin eggs because they looked a lot like pekin eggs.If they are still alive at the temp you had running before after 29 days I would stick with that temp. It would be good to get a second thermometer. It's not impossible that the incubator heater could start acting weird halfway through but if they are still alive I would go with what has worked this far.